Okay, when reading various blogs (or checking facebook) I always get nervous that the page's owner will analyze the logs and call me out on just how many times and how rapidly i hit refresh waiting for new content to appear or hoping that someone has replied to my comment.
Historically, they are interchangeable. Insure has come to mean primarily insurance, particularly in the UK, though the first definition given in the OED is still "to make a person sure of a thing" (marked obsolete), but I still see insure with that meaning regularly from Americans.
Avoid being honest? And what does that have to do with his price point comment? You can be honest and still charge someone more than something costs... I'd say it's almost dishonest not to. It's called charging for your time/work,etc?
Wow... I also don't understand why these traits (cognitive biases?) fit together, but somehow they feel like a coherent archetype. Surprisingly insightful.
I saw 3000 visits on my post this morning, I thought, wow, lots of spambots last night. But then I notice it was posted here. Fixed the spelling mistake, I usually check for that but sometimes one slips. English is not my primary language. Thanks for your comments.
20 comments
[ 4.8 ms ] story [ 58.1 ms ] threadThe other one is at work, sometimes explaining why I have something set up the way I do and how I'm using it is awkward.
http://www.google.com/dictionary?langpair=en|en&q=ensure
I like this quote:
http://www.wsu.edu/~brians/errors/assure.html
"Other authorities, however, consider “ensure” and “insure” interchangeable. To please conservatives, make the distinction."
Looks like the Grammar Nazis have won, when we're giving writing advice intended purely to avoid their wrath.
OED ref, though I don't think that's a public link if you're not on a campus with a licence:
http://dictionary.oed.com/cgi/entry/50118480?single=1&qu...
Gawd. Do you guys read before you vote?