Author Archives: copyeditcat

The Resting Bitch Face of Punctuation

Do you abuse the exclamation point?

If you do, it might be because using the good old period is, when it comes to punctuation, the equivalent of resting bitch face. (“You’d be so much prettier if you smiled more.”)

At least, that’s one of the comments in a recent Facebook discussion about the gendered use of punctuation.

Observe:

  • Let’s get this project moving forward.
  • Let’s get this project moving forward!

A female boss might write the second sentence—along with a smiling emoji—so that she’s not perceived as being too aggressive, too bossy, too something. It’s an attempt to appear enthusiastic while avoiding stepping on someone’s fragile ego, which is a dance familiar to many female bosses, no doubt.

Me, I use exclamation marks when trying to be funny or when injecting levity into a conversation. But I’m not a fan of their excessive use. I’m definitely on team period, resting bitch face be damned.

I’ll monitor this gendered use of the exclamation mark in my own email interactions and report back.

Progressing My Editorial Knowledge

I had some free time today, so I perused Peck’s English Pointers. (Frances Peck is a well-known Canadian editor.) Here’s a sentence submitted to Peck for her scrutiny: The department continues to progress this matter at a high priority and, given the magnitude of change and rule harmonization required for reflectorization of every rail carContinue Reading

Live from Corinne Wasilewski

Corinne Wasilewski is a new Mansfield Press author with a recently published novel called Live from the Underground. Last week, I attended Mansfield’s fall book launch, where I had the pleasure of hearing the author read and the opportunity to buy the book. (Full disclosure: Wasilewski is my sister.) This is a thoughtful, well-written storyContinue Reading

Find Your Inner Curmudgeon

I recently came across a pithy little book of 35 life tips, written by older baby boomer Charles Murray and addressed to millennials. The book is called The Curmudgeon’s Guide to Getting Ahead, and I disagree with reviewers on Goodreads who dismiss the author as an old white guy hiding behind the ruse of curmudgeonlinessContinue Reading

Invisible Me

Kirstine Stewart, vice-president of Twitter, has a new book out about female leadership. (Flare posted an excerpt.) No doubt Stewart has many stories to tell. And I’m always eager to hear the experiences of women, because the female experience is rarely articulated—and females are often not articulated to. I was lamenting recently that there are many so-calledContinue Reading

Edit for Good, Not Ego

My last post was about persnickety copy editors, dubbed assertionists. This xkcd cartoon beautifully conveys the problem with assertionists. Maya Angelou once said that people will forget what you said or did, but they’ll remember how you made them feel. Readers may forget your content, but they won’t forget how your use of language madeContinue Reading

Copy Editor as Assertionist

Carol Fisher Saller, author of one of my fav editing books, The Subversive Copy Editor, was the keynote speaker at Editors Canada’s first international conference in June. She spoke about assertionists, those pesky grammar sticklers who insist on blindly following grammar rules. She wondered what was bugging these copy editors, and she suggested that assertionists bemoanContinue Reading

The Universe, God, and Vulnerability

My to-read list just keeps getting longer. I’m psyched to get my hands on the recently published A God That Could Be Real: Spirituality, Science, and the Future of Our Planet by Nancy Ellen Abrams (follow the link for an excerpt). Abrams, a lawyer, is married to an astrophysicist and has thus followed the lastContinue Reading

Editing Canadian English

The third edition of Editing Canadian English is now available online. This resource, published by the Editors’ Association of Canada, is a guide for editors and writers who want to establish an appropriate Canadian style. But much of the content is useful apart from a Canadian context. For example, the section on editorial niches hasContinue Reading

The Networking Name Game

I was recently at a networking lunch, and I (once again!) found myself wondering what someone’s name was mere minutes after we introduced ourselves to one another. The simple fix? After a person introduces themselves, say, “Nice to meet you, Person’s Name.” According to this animated video review of Dale Carnegie’s How to Win FriendsContinue Reading