August 18, 2025

Weak Sentence? Look at the Structure

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When you come across a sentence like “Knowing the realities of the cosmic structure of the universe can at times be elusive," pare it down to the main clause: "Knowing can be elusive" is a whole lot of nothing. Once you see that, you can find better ways to get your meaning across.

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I was like, 'No way!'
Posted by June on August 18, 2025

I was like, “No way.”

The word “like” is legend among grammar grumblers. There are several uses of "like" that they take issue with. But the one they hate most is when it's a synonym for “said.”

“I was like, ‘totally.’”

“She was like, ‘Right?’”

And so on.

This use of “like” has been annoying parents for so long now that the annoyers are becoming parents themselves. And by the time the perpetrators of X, Y or Z language atrocity enter adulthood, their language quirks usually become mainstream, accepted, correct.

No, that’s not a bad thing. That’s how pretty much every word became a word and how every correct usage today became correct usage. Everything was wrong once. So I was wondering if “like” had yet gained any respectability as a formal substitute for “said.”

I’m not finding any evidence that it has. Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary does not mention the usage. And Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary of English Usage, which is normally the first to defend such contested constructions, doesn’t mention it either.

So technically “I was like, ‘No way” isn’t sanctioned in formal speech yet.

Still, I kind of like it. It has a connotation that “said” does not. It suggests a reaction that may or may not have been overtly spoken. So it affords the user a freedom that “said” does not.

“I was like, ‘No way’” can mean that those were the words you spoke or that those were the words that ran silently through your head. But “I said, ‘No way’” leaves no such wiggle room. So this usage of “to be like,” which I bet will be sanctioned someday, can be a lot more fun.

June Casagrande is a writer and journalist whose weekly grammar/humor column, “A Word, Please,” appears in community newspapers in California, Florida, and Texas. more

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  • When is an apostrophe not an apostrophe?

    June Good catch! Thanks. I fixed to follow AP style of using single quotation marks in headlines.

  • When is an apostrophe not an apostrophe?

    brenda Speaking of correct apostrophe usage, check out your headline: I was like, 'No way!" Posted by June on August 18, 2025 I’m a proofer, too, and am constantly correcting the use of apostrophes! :)

  • ChatGPT can't do me

    mike re: first-person plural. I've made countless edits changing "we" and "our" in technical pieces — there's a strong pull there to use "nurse-person plural" ("how are we feeling today?") in tutorials, recipes, and similar. Clearly AI got it from somewhere, and I think a lot of people are okay with this faux-familiar, we're-in-it-together style. https://www.mikepope.com/blog

  • Not grieving the demise of the semicolon

    23 June 2025 – Optimal Editorial Services […] but unlike Grammar Underground’s June Casagrande, I am a cheerleader for the tipped wink (;) (https://www.grammarunderground.com/not-grieving-the-demise-of-the-semicolon.html). In my opinion, it changes the key of a discussion from major to minor and gives a subtle hint to […] https://www.optimaleditorialservices.co.uk/2025/06/23/23-june-2025/

  • Is 'Alright' All Right?

    Amy Lechter I believe I should have put my comments above into this space. Oh well, hope you might take a moment to respond. I have just watched some of your podcasts and appreciate your direct and honest voice :>) http://amysiegeltutoring