‘ Either ’ versus ‘ neither ’
 ‘ Either ’ takes ‘ or ’, while ‘ neither ’ takes ‘ nor ’: Either he goes or I go .
 Neither Kensington nor Paddington has a train service .
 ‘ Either ’ and ‘ neither ’ can only be used to compare two items : Neither Kensington , Paddington nor Randwick has a train service .
 As pronouns and adjectives , ‘ either ’ and ‘ neither ’ take a singular verb : Neither Kensington nor Paddington has a train service .
 Neither Kensington nor Paddington have a train service .
 ‘ Fewer ’ and ‘ less ’
 Use ‘ fewer ’ when discussing nouns that can be counted : The new campus will offer fewer courses .
 Use ‘ less ’ when discussing singular mass nouns , or things that cannot be counted : There will be less effort involved .
 Figures of speech
 Take care when using standard phrases , as many have been corrupted in popular use : toe the line tow the line
 ‘ Forego ’ and ‘ forgo ’
 To ‘ forego ’ means to go before , while to ‘ forgo ’ means to give up or relinquish : The trailers will forego the feature film .
 You do not have to forgo your creature comforts .
 ‘ Lay ’ and ‘ lie ’
 To ‘ lay ’ primarily means to set something down in a resting position . It requires a direct object : I laid the notebook on the table .
 I don ’ t like to lay my notebook on the floor .
 In addition to telling an untruth , to ‘ lie ’ also means to set in a resting position but it does not have a direct object :
 The notebook lies on the table .
 To make matters more confusing , the past tense of ‘ lie ’ is ‘ lay ’: Yesterday the notebook lay on the table .
 Myriad
 ‘ Myriad ’ can be used in place of ‘ many ’: There were myriad complications .
 There was a myriad of complications . home in on pore over a map wait with bated breath with one fell swoop shoo-in moot point hone in on pour over a map wait with baited breath with one foul swoop shoe-in mute point
 ‘ Onto ’ and ‘ on to ’
 ‘ Onto ’ is used as one word where it is a preposition : He jumped onto the bus .
 But in cases where on is tied to the verb , it should be written as two words : She moved on to the next course .
 The same rule applies to ‘ into ’ and ‘ in to ’.
 Writing Style Guide | Commonly misused terms 61 | Back to contents