Lucas

Hey, I'm Lucas. My blog explores the patterns and connects the dots between tech, business, and gaming. If you're a curious mind who loves to see how different worlds intersect, you're in the right place.

simpler or more simple concept illustration

Simpler vs More Simple: When to Use Each for Clarity

As a copy editor and writing coach who has fixed 10,000+ sentences over 12 years, here’s the quick take: say “simpler” most of the time. “More simple” is fine for emphasis or rhythm. Yes, both work. The whole “simpler or more simple” debate lives inside basic comparative adjectives, grammar rules, and plain English. And no,…

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y words to describe personality traits

Y Words to Describe Personality: From Youthful to Yappy

As a language coach and editor who’s profiled 300+ people over the last decade, here’s the fast answer: if you’re hunting for y words to describe someone personality, you’ll use simple y adjectives like youthful, yielding, yappy, and yeasty to nail clear personality traits. In my experience, these positive and negative descriptors make writing profiles…

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swinged or swung

Swung or Swinged: Past Tense and Participle of Swing

As a grammar coach who’s marked up thousands of drafts over 12+ years, here’s the no-drama answer you want: the past tense of “swing” is “swung.” If you’re wondering about “swinged or swung,” pick “swung.” It’s an irregular verb. The past participle is also “swung.” Easy. Breathe. Quick answer, since you’re busy If you write…

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plural of rhinoceros

Rhinoceros Plural: Rhinoceroses or Rhinoceros, Not Rhinoceri

As a language nerd who’s argued about the plural of rhinoceros for 12 years, here’s the quick take: the standard is “rhinoceroses,” the unchanged “rhinoceros” is also accepted in modern usage, and “rhinoceri” is a fake-Latin crowd-pleaser that raises my blood pressure. Irregular plural, Latin vs. Greek roots, and basic grammar collide here. Fun, right?…

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written or writen concept illustration

Written vs Writen: Past Participle of Write Explained

The quick answer, from a tired editor who fixes this daily As a copy editor and English coach who’s corrected thousands of essays over 12+ years, here’s the blunt truth: it’s “written,” not “writen.” If you’re searching “written or writen,” you’re dealing with the past participle of write, an irregular verb, and a super common…

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hardwork dedication

Hard Work vs Hardworking: Noun vs Adjective, No Hyphen

As a copy editor-turned-blogger who’s cleaned up 2,000+ typos over the last decade, here’s the quick answer you want: for the question “hardwork one or two words,” it’s two words as a noun—“hard work”—and one word as an adjective—“hardworking.” I’ve tested this in résumés, brand guidelines, and yes, embarrassing email signatures. LSI bits for folks…

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