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- Newsgroups: ba.general
- Path: sparky!uunet!Cadence.COM!phz
- From: phz@cadence.com (Pete Zakel)
- Subject: Re: What does [sic] mean?
- Message-ID: <1992Dec22.233404.11743@Cadence.COM>
- Sender: usenet@Cadence.COM (Usenet News)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: cds709.cadence.com
- Organization: Cadence Design Systems
- References: <ByF89v.4p9@well.sf.ca.us> <tecot.722986361@Xenon.Stanford.EDU>
- Distribution: ba
- Date: Tue, 22 Dec 1992 23:34:04 GMT
- Lines: 27
-
- In article <tecot.722986361@Xenon.Stanford.EDU> tecot@Xenon.Stanford.EDU (Edward M. Tecot) writes:
- >cristina@well.sf.ca.us (Christina Paddock) writes:
- >>I see [sic] in a lot of posts here. What is it?
- >It stands for "spelling is correct" and is borrowed from newspapers and other
- >periodicals. It's used in a quote or attribution where the original author
- >used a spelling other than what is generally accepted. The [sic] tells the
- >reader that this is not a typographical error.
-
- Well, almost.
-
- "Sic" is a legitimate Latin word meaning "so" or "thus" and is inserted
- when quoting text following a questionable spelling, usage, or punctuation
- to indicate that what you are seeing is not a typo, but an accurate quote.
-
- And it isn't "borrowed from newpapers and other periodicals". If you weren't
- taught how and when to use "[sic]" in high school, then your schooling was
- either insufficient, or you weren't taking college prep courses, or you went
- to high school somewhere outside the US and UK.
-
- Although "spelling is correct" may be a good mnemonic method to remember when
- to use it, sic is NOT an acronym.
-
- -Pete Zakel
- (phz@cadence.com or ..!uunet!cadence!phz)
-
- "Baldric, go forth into the streets and announce that Lord Blackadder wishes
- to sell his house. Percy, just go forth into the streets."
-