If this were lengthened further, the close of the second pair of inverted commas would be delayed accordingly: ‘Indeed it is,’ said my mother. ‘When will you be able to get to us? Need I say ‘‘the earlier the better’’? You know that we’ll be up at the crack of dawn.’ " Inverted commas are used to enclose titles. Have you read ‘Angela’s Ashes’ by Frank McCourt? Alternatively, the title can be underlined or, in print, italicised. Inverted commas will not then be needed. " Inverted commas are used to enclose quotations. Like Coriolanus, I often feel that ‘there is a life elsewhere’. Note that the final full stop comes outside the inverted commas enclosing the quotation. Incorporating a quotation in a sentence is different from punctuating direct speech. See INDIRECT/REPORTED SPEECH. See TITLES. invisible (not -able) irational Wrong spelling. See IRRATIONAL. iridescent (not -rr-) irony or sarcasm? IRONY is subtle, amusing, often witty. SARCASM is deliberately hurtful and intentionally cruel. Irony comes from a Greek word meaning ‘pretended ignorance’. INVISIBLE 102 Sarcasm comes from a Greek word meaning ‘to tear the flesh with one’s teeth’. Irony relies on those with insight realising that what is said is the opposite of what is meant. Mr Bennet in Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice frequently makes ironical remarks which only his more perceptive listeners will understand. When he tells one of his less musical daughters that she has delighted the company with her piano playing for long enough, she takes his remarks at face value. Jane and Elizabeth, two of her sisters, know exactly what he really meant. Sarcasm sometimes uses this technique of irony and says in a very cutting way (which will be very clearly understood) the opposite of what is really meant. When a teacher says, ‘Brilliant!’, to a pupil who fails yet again, he is being sarcastic and ironical at the same time. When a teacher says, ‘Have you lost your tongue?’ to a pupil, he is being sarcastic. irrational (not -r-) irrelevant (not irrevelant: think of ‘does not relate’) irreparable irreplaceable See SOFT C AND SOFT G. irrepressible irresistible irresponsible irrevelant Wrong spelling. See IRRELEVANT. irreversible irridescent Wrong spelling. See IRIDESCENT. IRRIDESCENT 103 TEAMFLY Team-Fly ® -ise or -ize? Most words ending with this suffix can be spelt -ise or -ize in British English. American English is more prescriptive and insists on -ize whenever there is a choice. House-styles in Britain vary from publisher to publisher and from newspaper to newspaper. (You may have noticed that in this book I favour -ise.) When making your choice, bear these two points in mind: " These nineteen words have to be -ise: advertise, advise, apprise, arise, chastise, circumcise, comprise, compromise, despise, devise, disguise, enfranchise, excise, exercise, improvise, revise, supervise, surprise, televise. " Only one verb of more than one syllable has to be -ize: capsize. (One syllabled verbs like ‘seize’ still need care, of course.) Whatever you decide, be consistent within one piece of writing and be consistent with derivatives. If you use ‘realize’ in one paragraph, you must use ‘realization’ and not ‘realisation’ at another point in the same piece. If you use ‘sympathize’, then you must refer to ‘sympathizers’ and not to ‘sympathisers’ elsewhere. Many authorities prefer to use -ize when there is a choice. In practice, many writers prefer to use -ise because this choice is relatively trouble-free. The decision is yours! isn’t Place the apostrophe carefully. (not is’nt) itinerary (five syllables, not four as it is often mispronounced and misspelt) -ISE OR -IZE? 104 its or it’s? ITS is a possessive adjective like ‘her’ and ‘his’: The book has lost ITS cover. ITS beauty has faded. IT’S is a contraction of ‘it is’ or ‘it has’: IT’S very cold today. (= it is) IT’S been a long winter. (=it has) If you are ever in doubt, see if you can expand ‘its/it’s’ to ‘it is’ or ‘it has’. If you can, you need an apostrophe. If you can’t, you don’t. Remember too that contractions like ‘it’s’ are fine in informal contexts but should be avoided in formal writing. When it’s inappropriate to use slang, it is inappropriate to use these contractions. You have to write the forms in full. ITS OR IT’S? 105 J jealous (not jelous) jealousy jeopardise/jeopardize Both spellings are correct. jeopardy jewelry/jewellery Both spellings are correct. (not jewlery as the word is often mispronounced) jodhpurs journey (singular) journeys (plural) See PLURALS (iii). judgement/judgment Both spellings are correct. judicial or judicious? JUDICIAL =pertainingtocourtsoflaw and judges JUDICIOUS = showing good judgment, wise, prudent The words are not interchangeable. There is a clear distinction in meaning, as you can see. A JUDICIAL decision is one reached in a law court. A JUDICIOUS decision is a wise and discerning one. 106 K keenness keen + ness kerb See CURB OR KERB?. kernel See COLONEL OR KERNEL?. kibbutz (singular) kibbutzim (plural) See FOREIGN PLURALS. kidnap kidnapped, kidnapping, kidnapper An exception to the 2-1-1 rule. See ADDING ENDINGS (iv). kneel kneeled or knelt, kneeling knew or new? Use these exemplar sentences as a guide: I KNEW the answer. Nanette has NEW shoes. knife (singular) knives (plural) See PLURALS (v). know or no? Use these exemplar sentences as a guide: IKNOWthe answer. NO, they cannot come. We have NO milk left. knowledge knowledgeable/ Both spellings are correct. knowledgable 107 . forms in full. ITS OR IT’S? 105 J jealous (not jelous) jealousy jeopardise/jeopardize Both spellings are correct. jeopardy jewelry/jewellery Both spellings are correct. (not jewlery as the word. (not -rr-) irony or sarcasm? IRONY is subtle, amusing, often witty. SARCASM is deliberately hurtful and intentionally cruel. Irony comes from a Greek word meaning ‘pretended ignorance’. INVISIBLE 102 Sarcasm. See IRIDESCENT. IRRIDESCENT 1 03 TEAMFLY Team-Fly ® -ise or -ize? Most words ending with this