Yikes. Caught this run-on
sentence in a morning sports column about an NBA playoff game; felt compelled
to read it aloud to my wife over breakfast to help ease her into the day (see
second sentence):
The effort
wasn't the issue Tuesday night. The Bucks hung with the Hawks about as long as
humanly possible without the kind of center that might have put a
cease-and-desist order on some of the mismatches that continued to occur with
regularity on a floor where the home team almost never loses.
This is called trying too
hard, and this sportswriter, unfortunately, makes a habit of it. The sentence
does make some sense, but only with too much head-scratching on the reader’s
part. Had the writer, and copy editor, read this aloud before turning it in, I
highly doubt it would have passed muster.
In most nonfiction
writing, if you’re doing acrobatics trying to make a sentence work or to be
clever, or making a single sentence do too much heavy lifting, it’s a good sign
you’re about to torture the reader. Put the poor thing out of its misery and
start over!
-- Ron Kovach, senior editor, The Writer
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