Page:A Desk-Book of Errors in English.djvu/103

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Errors in English
first-rate
fondling

flies on: "There are no flies on him," is a slang phrase not used by persons accustomed to refined diction.

flock: A word sometimes misapplied. Do not say "a flock of girls;" say, rather, "a bevy of girls" and "a flock of sheep." Flock is correctly applied to a company or collection of small animals as sheep, goats, rabbits, or birds.

flop: is an inelegant word used sometimes to denote change of attitude on a subject. Do not say "He flopped over to the other side"; say, rather, "He went over.…"

flub-dub: A slang term used to designate a literary work that is worthless.

flummux: A vulgarism sometimes used for "perplex" or "disconcert."

fly off the handle: A colloquial phrase meaning to "lose one's self control" as from anger.

folks: The modern colloquial plural use of this term is not to be recommended. The word is properly used, both in singular and plural form, as folk, its correct signification being "people, collectively or distributively."

foment, ferment: Exercise care in the use of these words. Foment is to bathe with warm or medicated lotions; ferment, to cause chemical decomposition in. Both words are also used figuratively.

fondling, foundling: Discriminate carefully be-

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