AA: I'm Avi Arditti with Rosanne Skirble, and this week on  WORDMASTER: Charles Harrington Elster, author of "The Accidents of  Style: Good Advice on How Not to Write Badly."
RS: It's full of examples, such as this common error. 
 
 
Carmen Elster
CHARLES ELSTER: "What you need to remember is that 'its' indicates  possession, without an apostrophe, i-t-s, and i-t-apostrophe-s is a  contraction of it is. So if you realize that you are writing or saying  'it is' you need the apostrophe. When you do not intend to write 'it  is,' then no apostrophe, it's the possessive pronoun its."
RS:  "The problem with its and it's also is that they sound the same, as  'your' and 'you're' and 'there' and 'their.' What is your suggestion for  words that may sound alike but are spelled differently and have very  different meanings?"
CHARLES ELSTER: "Unfortunately you have to  learn them by rote. You have to memorize or perhaps use a mnemonic  device, a memory aid. I offer some sentences as mnemonic devices in the  book so that you can remember that t-h-e-r-e indicates a place, 'over  there,' and that t-h-e-i-r indicates possession, 'their feelings,' and  t-h-e-y-apostrophe-r-e, whenever you see that apostrophe in the middle  of a word, you know it's a contraction, so it's got to be 'they are.'"
AA: "What about the confusion between infer and imply? A lot of people get that wrong."
CHARLES  ELSTER: "A lot of people do confuse infer and imply. The best way to  remember that distinction, I think, is to remember that when you imply  you are making a suggestion. You are like the baseball pitcher throwing  something out, you're hinting or suggesting -- you're pitching the  baseball. When you infer, you come to a conclusion or you make a  deduction. Therefore you are like the baseball catcher. You are catching  that suggestion or that statement and you are making a deduction or a  conclusion from it."
RS:     Another common error, says Charles Elster: irregular verbs that are misconjugated.
CHARLES  ELSTER: "I can't tell you how often I hear college-educated native  speakers of English, even advanced degree people, lawyers, say 'I could  have ran,' 'I should have went,' 'I would have drank.' They know that  you 'run' in the present and that you 'ran' in the past, so they try to  regularize the verb a little bit and say 'I have ran' as a past  participle when it still needs to remain irregular and has to be 'I have  run.' I drink, I drank and I have drunk, not 'I have drank.'"
RS: "Then there's the confusion between affect and effect.'
CHARLES  ELSTER: "You have to remember that affect with an a is chiefly the  verb. That's going to be the verb you need most of the time. When  something has an effect on something else, it affects, with an a. Effect  with an e is chiefly a noun. So when something has an effect, it's  going to have an effect. So affect, a, verb. Effect, noun, e.  Occasionally effect with an e will be used as a verb. You 'effect  change.' That's with an e. But that's much less common than affect the  verb with an a."
AA: "And tell us what you have against irregardless."
CHARLES  ELSTER: "Irregardless is probably the most famous, what you might call  non-word in the language. Of course, it is a word because lots of people  have used it, and so you'll even find it in English dictionaries --  hopefully labeled nonstandard, which means not good to use. All you have  to say is regardless."
RS: "Do you have a particular something in your book, or the accident, every time you see it that just makes you cringe?"
CHARLES  ELSTER: "If I had to choose one accident that grates more than any  other, it's when people say, thinking they're being hypercorrect,  'between you and I' or 'for you and I.' That 'I' is wrong. It should not  be a nominative pronoun. It should be the objective pronoun, 'between  you and me,' 'for you and me.' Nobody would say 'for you and I.' It's  'for me' and 'between you and me.'"
AA: Charles Elster is the author of "The Accidents of Style: Good Advice on How Not to Write Badly." 
RS:  And that's WORDMASTER for this week. You can find a lot more advice at  voanews.com/wordmaster. With Avi Arditti, I'm Rosanne Skirble. And, by  the way, 'a lot' is two words -- a lot.