"eponymous river/lake" might help some readers learn a new word for that day. Dsvid Minor > As we approach the Hudson-Champlain observances in 2009, there is a > question > of historians' writing style that has me intrigued. I find myself > slightly > annoyed when I read a phrase that seems to me trite and hackneyed in > otherwise good historical writing. Am I being oversensitive, or is this > a valid > gripe? The phrase is this: In 1609 Hudson/Champlain "explored the > river/lake > which bears his name." This gets written in this way over and over. > Shouldn't > this worn-out, stale phrase be avoided by good writers? I guess once one > begins to notice it, the more annoying it gets. > > Paul Huey > > > > ************************************** AOL now offers free email to > everyone. > Find out more about what's free from AOL at http://www.aol.com. > -- David Minor Eagles Byte Historical Research Pittsford, New York 585 264-0423 'dminor' 'at symbol' 'eznet.net' To be put on the mailing list for the weekly TimeMaster radio scripts (WXXI-FM 91.5), as well as a Quote of the Week and a URL of the Week, e-mail me at the address above. HOME PAGE http://home.eznet.net/~dminor includes NYNY, a series of timelines covering New York City and State, from approximately 1,100,000,000 BC to 1992 AD. http://home.eznet.net/~dminor/NYNY.html Visit the Canal Society of New York State page at http://www.canalsnys.org/