Longman Dictionary of Common Errors
Longman
ND Turton
JB Heaton
Edited by Hamid Sarrafzadeh
Contents
A
1
B
41
C
57
D
85
E
103
F
123
G
139
H
147
I
161
J
175
K
178
L
182
M
196
N
215
O
226
P
240
Q
255
R
257
S
272
T
299
U
321
V
327
W
332
Y
343
List of common misspellings ................345
GLOSSARY ...........................................348
1
A
a
1
I hope you all have a enjoyable stay.
I hope you all have an enjoyable stay.
Always use
an
(NOT
a
) before a word beginning with a vowel sound: ‘an egg’ ‘an envelope’.
2
My husband is doing a MSc in civil engineering.
My husband is doing an MSc in civil engineering.
Use
an
(NOT
a
) before an abbreviation that begins with a vowel sound: ‘an MSc’ ‘an MP’.
3
Sometimes it is difficult to live a honest life.
Sometimes it is difficult to live an honest life.
Use
an
(NOT
a
) before words beginning with h when the h is not pronounced: ‘an honour’ , ‘an
hour’.
a/an
1
The child had been a deaf since birth.
The child had been deaf since birth.
One of the girls I share with is a British.
One of the girls I share with is British.
Do not use
a/an
before an adjective (e.g. ‘deaf’, ‘British’) unless the adjective is followed by a
noun: ‘Her husband is disabled.’ Compare: ‘The footbridge cannot be used by the disabled.’ (= all
people who are disabled)
2
See
ANOTHER 6
abandon
1
Since capital punishment was abandoned, the crime rate has increased.
Since capital punishment was abolished, the crime rate has increased.
abandon
= give up a plan, activity or attempt to do something, without being successful: ‘Bad
weather forced them to abandon the search.’ ‘Without government support, the project will have
to be abandoned.’
abolish
= remove a law, tradition or system, often by introducing a new law; do away with: ‘In
which year was slavery abolished in the United States?’ ‘I’d hate to see the monarchy abolished.’
2
It is difficult to reach abandoned places such as small country villages.
It is difficult to reach remote places such as small country villages.
abandoned
= left for ever by the owners or occupiers: ‘The field was littered with abandoned
cars.’ ‘Some of these old abandoned coal mines could be dangerous.’
remote
= far away and difficult to reach: ‘The tribe lives in a small remote mountain village.’ ‘We
have now managed to bring famine relief to people in even the most remote areas.’
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