The Top Five Grammar Mistakes Editors See

the-top-5-grammar-mistakes-editors-see

Every writer would like to believe his or her work is perfect. However, the best writers know that a little editorial assistance can smooth a rough draft into a polished final manuscript. Quite often, it’s small errors that trip up aspiring writers. To help you avoid these common grammatical errors, we’ll discuss the top five mistakes and why they’re wrong.

Probably number one on the list would be confusing then and than. Then is a measure of time. Than is a measure of degree. I’ll study harder for the next exam, and then I’ll make a better grade than you.

See how that works?

Closely following that would be the misuse of its and it’s. Its is possessive: The dog wagged its tail. It’s is a contraction of it is: It’s hot today.

An easy way to test which spelling you should use is to use it is in the sentence. If it makes no sense, you need to use its, not it’s. For example The dog wagged it is tail. Does that make sense? Of course not! So you’d use its, the possessive form, instead.

A standard error that sets an editor’s teeth on edge is the misuse of I and me after a preposition. Which of the following sentences would you say was correct?

  • John gave the gift to Suzy and I.
  • John gave the gift to Suzy and me.

Grammar Mistakes Editors See

If you picked the second sentence, you’re right! Again, there is an easy way to determine whether to use the objective rather than the subjective case. Leave off the other person’s name and read the sentences:

  • John gave the gift to I.
  • John gave the gift to me.

Now which one becomes clearly wrong? You’ve got it—the first sentence is obviously grammatically incorrect.

Grammatical errors numbers four and five are both sets of homophones, words that sound alike but are spelled differently and have different meanings:

  • There, they’re, and their. There is a location. They’re is a contraction of they are. Their is possessive: They’re going to move their car over there.
  • To, too, and two. To is used as a preposition preceding a noun or as an infinitive preceding a verb: It was apparent to Mary that they were not going to see the movie tonight.
  • Too is used to mean also, or an excessive amount: I’m miserable too, after eating too much chocolate.
  • Two is a number that falls between one and three: A pair is made up of two items.

Keep these simple tips in mind, and you can avoid these five common grammatical errors.

Originally posted 10/3/2015 and happily updated 10/28/2017. Thanks for reading!

Frequently Asked Questions

First Editing is equipped to edit ANY type of document you can write! Over the past 10 years, we’ve perfected tens of thousands of manuscripts, books, ebooks, theses, dissertations, essays, letters, websites, articles, scripts, business proposals, poetry, and more! Let us transform your draft into a perfectly edited masterpiece! Click HERE for a FREE sample edit and price quote…
Projects less than 50 pages are completed in just 2-3 business days. Longer documents (manuscripts, dissertations, etc.) require 7-10 business days depending on their length. If you order multiple documents totaling 50+ pages, they can all still be completed in the standard 3 day timeframe since each document may be assigned to a different editing team simultaneously. Additionally, 1-2 day rush services are also available. See our order form for more details.
Professional editors of successfully published books, journals, articles, and more are working around the clock to ensure your editing is letter-perfect and delivered according to your deadline. Each editor has a minimum of TEN years worth of professional writing & editing experience. Show us some of YOUR writing and we’ll send YOU a FREE editing sample!
First Editing is one of the very few online editing services that GUARANTEES client satisfaction! If there is ANYTHING about our work with which you are not 100% satisfied, we will correct it at no additional charge. First Editing is also the ONLY service of its kind to GUARANTEE on-time completion. We NEVER miss a deadline…EVER!! Read more about our Editing Satisfaction Guarantee.
Our basic rates vary from just 1 U.S. cent per word to just over 3 U.S. cents per word. Most basic copy editing that does not require rush delivery costs between $0.0097 and $0.013 USD per word (approximately one cent per word). Larger orders often cost even less. Factors influencing your total price are document type, length of manuscript, turnaround time required, & level of editing required. For a free, no-obligation price quote, CLICK HERE.

Share With :

GTCoding
Get a free editing sample outlining areas you need to fix before publishing. Discover what works!

Add Your Heading Text Here

Add Your Heading Text Here