They mean different things, with some overlap. In the proper sense of the word, using both is redundant: reduntant doesn't need to mean that the...
Actually, this isn't really an idiom. I've never heard this espression before today, yet with a little bit of context, I was able to understand it...
I disagree with this (if I'm understanding it correctly). Using the indefinite article "a" changes the meaning of this sentence quite a bit. It...
This part is an urban legend perpetuated by the inventor of the DVORAK keyboard against QWERTY. QWERTY was never designed to slow typists down,...
I don't see "trobuleshooting the problem" as odd-sounding, though "troubleshoot the issue" sounds slightly more natural. I think either...
The knife one isn't bad, but pay attention to your text -- your title is still stretched, and it does weird things to the eye. Fo you own the...
One thing I'd like to call out (sounds like you've done some research, so you're probably already aware, but just for the sake of completeness):...
I'm not sure I agree with this. I read "dysfunctional" here in the same sense as in "dysfunctional family", meaning that there's something that's...
I would add to this: Also, don't take Word's word (see what I did there?) for it that something is wrong. It tends to have relatively frequent...
Agreed on the "hire someone" thing. You don't have to hire a cover artist specifically; if you want something rather basic, find a freelance...
Yep, this is true. I think we've already satisfactorily answered the question, but I have a couple more thoughts, and as it is 3AM, I simply feel...
What Banzai said. Young adult can be as little as 50,000 words. A full-length novel is usually cited as 100,000 words, though this varies wildly....
Modern word processors, and basically anything with proportional typesetting will automatically use wider spaces after sentences, so, on a...
Thanks, I feel so much better now that you've taken to marginalize my position, and declare my opinion invalid. (I mean, it's on the Internet, so...
I'm familiar with reductio ad absurdum. It can be legitimate in some cases, but is, in addition, a common logical fallacy, specifically when used...
Separate names with a comma.