Back of for Behind,
At the Back of. “Back of law is force.”
Backwards for Backward.
Badly for Bad.
“I feel badly.” “He looks badly.”
The former sentence implies defective nerves of sensation,
the latter, imperfect vision. Use the adjective.
Balance for Remainder.
“The balance of my time is given to recreation.”
In this sense balance is a commercial word, and relates
to accounting.
Banquet. A good enough
word in its place, but its place is the dictionary.
Say, dinner.
Bar for Bend. “Bar
sinister.” There is no such thing in heraldry
as a bar sinister.
Because for For.
“I knew it was night, because it was dark.”
“He will not go, because he is ill.”
Bet for Betted.
The verb to bet forms its preterite regularly, as
do wet, wed, knit, quit and others that are commonly
misconjugated. It seems that we clip our short
words more than we do our long.
Body for Trunk.
“The body lay here, the head there.”
The body is the entire physical person (as distinguished
from the soul, or mind) and the head is a part of
it. As distinguished from head, trunk may include
the limbs, but anatomically it is the torso only.
Bogus for Counterfeit,
or False. The word is slang; keep it out.
Both. This word is frequently
misplaced; as, “A large mob, both of men and
women.” Say, of both men and women.
Both alike. “They
are both alike.” Say, they are alike.
One of them could not be alike.
Brainy. Pure slang, and singularly disagreeable.
Bug for Beetle, or for anything.
Do not use it.
Business for Right.
“He has no business to go there.”
Build for Make.
“Build a fire.” “Build a canal.”
Even “build a tunnel” is not unknown,
and probably if the wood-chuck is skilled in the American
tongue he speaks of building a hole.
But. By many writers this
word (in the sense of except) is regarded as a preposition,
to be followed by the objective case: “All
went but him.” It is not a preposition
and may take either the nominative or objective case,
to agree with the subject or the object of the verb.
All went but he. The natives killed all but him.
But what. “I did
not know but what he was an enemy.” Omit
what. If condemnation of this dreadful locution
seem needless bear the matter in mind in your reading
and you will soon be of a different opinion.
By for Of. “A
man by the name of Brown.” Say, of the name.
Better than either form is: a man named Brown.