GRAMMAR CONFUSION8 Min Read Adrian WellsonJuly 15, 2026 Premise vs. Premises: Which One Fits Your Sentence? Premise (no s) refers to a single idea, assumption, or statement used as the basis of an argument. Premises (with s) refers either to multiple…
GRAMMAR CONFUSION7 Min Read Adrian WellsonJuly 15, 2026 Among vs. Amongst: Which One Should You Use? For American English, use among. It is the standard form in US journalism, business writing, academic prose, and everyday conversation. Both…
GRAMMAR CONFUSION6 Min Read Adrian WellsonJuly 15, 2026 Lots vs. Lot’s: Why the Apostrophe Is Almost Always Wrong When you mean “many” or “a large amount,” the correct spelling is always lots — no apostrophe. Writing…
GRAMMAR CONFUSION7 Min Read Adrian WellsonJuly 14, 2026 Smelled vs. Smelt: Which Past Tense Should You Use? For American English, the answer is straightforward: smelled. It is the standard past tense and past participle of smell in the United States…
GRAMMAR CONFUSION8 Min Read Adrian WellsonJuly 14, 2026 Former vs. Latter: How to Use Each One Correctly Former refers to the first of two items you just mentioned. Latter refers to the second. Both require the before them in this reference use,…
GRAMMAR CONFUSION7 Min Read Adrian WellsonJuly 14, 2026 Due To vs. Do To: Which One Is Correct? In a cause-and-effect phrase, the answer is always due to. Never do to. Writing do to where you mean because of or caused by is a spelling…