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Get it right.

Airship city

“Led” is the past tense of “lead.”

L.E.D. Not L.E.A.D.

Example: “Fran, who leads the group, led the meeting.”

When professional publications get the small stuff wrong, it makes us less trusting about the big stuff. Trust in media is already at an all-time low. Don’t alienate liberal arts majors and obsessive compulsives. We may be the last readers standing.

2 responses to “Get it right.”
  1. Mark Howells-Mead Avatar

    Big applause for the sentiment… and the accompanying photo.

  2. Stephane Deschamps Avatar

    Ah, yes. I have a few pet peeves like this in French too.
    People use wrong declination all the time. Like past tense vs infinitive, etc. (eg. “briefer” = to brief, “briefé” = briefed).
    Or cannot get it right between future and conditional: in English you have will/would, in French it’s a measly “s”: “je pourrai” (I will be able to) vs. “je pourrais” (I would).

    Most of the time it not only teases my pet peeve nerve, but it also mixes up the message. What did the person really mean? That she could, or that she will? That she was, or that she needs to?

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