Friday, August 21, 2015

dribble/drivel: Common Errors in English Usage Entry for Friday, August 21, 2015

dribble/drivel 
“Dribble” and “drivel” originally meant the same thing: drool. But the two words have become differentiated. When you mean to criticize someone else’s speech as stupid or pointless, the word you want is “drivel.”




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Happy birthday, Wilt Chamberlain (1936).

This is the tenth year of the Common Errors in English Usage calendar. To celebrate, we are bringing back some of our favorite interesting, funny, but sometimes merely silly entries through the years before going on hiatus in 2016.

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