LawProse Lesson #221: The fallacy of intelligibility. By Bryan A. Garner / LawProse Lessons / July 29, 2015 / 2 minutes of reading
LawProse Lesson #220: Is the verb “cite” transitive or intransitive? By Bryan A. Garner / LawProse Lessons / July 21, 2015 / 2 minutes of reading
LawProse Lesson #219: Are “certworthy” and “enbancworthy” bona fide words? By Bryan A. Garner / LawProse Lessons / July 15, 2015 / 1 minute of reading
LawProse Lesson #218: How much argle-bargle is required for jiggery-pokery? By Bryan A. Garner / LawProse Lessons / July 9, 2015 / 2 minutes of reading
LawProse Lesson #217: When do you capitalize “federal” and state”? By Bryan A. Garner / LawProse Lessons / July 2, 2015 / 2 minutes of reading
LawProse Lesson #216: Embracing constructive criticism. By Bryan A. Garner / LawProse Lessons / June 24, 2015 / 2 minutes of reading
LawProse Lesson #215: How do you decide which Latin phrases to italicize? By Bryan A. Garner / LawProse Lessons / June 17, 2015 / 2 minutes of reading
LawProse Lesson #214: Lawyers’ biggest failing as writers. By Bryan A. Garner / LawProse Lessons / June 11, 2015 / 1 minute of reading
LawProse Lesson #213: Caselaw: one word or two? By Bryan A. Garner / LawProse Lessons / June 3, 2015 / 1 minute of reading
LawProse Lesson #212: Be the voice of reason. By Bryan A. Garner / LawProse Lessons / May 28, 2015 / 3 minutes of reading
LawProse Lesson #211: Nouns of multitude. By Bryan A. Garner / LawProse Lessons / May 20, 2015 / 3 minutes of reading
LawProse Lesson #210: Collective vs. Mass Nouns By Bryan A. Garner / LawProse Lessons / May 13, 2015 / 5 minutes of reading
LawProse Lesson #209: Ban “and/or” By Bryan A. Garner / LawProse Lessons / May 6, 2015 / 4 minutes of reading
LawProse Lesson #208: “Graduate,” vb. By Bryan A. Garner / LawProse Lessons / April 29, 2015 / 2 minutes of reading
LawProse Lesson #207: Three ways to improve a statement of facts. By Bryan A. Garner / LawProse Lessons / April 22, 2015 / 1 minute of reading
LawProse Lesson #206: Statutory and Contractual Interpretation. By Bryan A. Garner / LawProse Lessons / April 9, 2015 / 2 minutes of reading
LawProse Lesson #205: Lay, v.t. vs. lie, v.i. By Bryan A. Garner / LawProse Lessons / April 1, 2015 / 2 minutes of reading
LawProse Lesson #204: “Lay of the land” or “lie of the land”? By Bryan A. Garner / LawProse Lessons / March 25, 2015 / 2 minutes of reading
LawProse Lesson #203: “Lie low” or “lay low”? By Bryan A. Garner / LawProse Lessons / March 18, 2015 / 2 minutes of reading
LawProse Lesson #202: Parenthetical plurals. By Bryan A. Garner / LawProse Lessons / March 11, 2015 / 2 minutes of reading