Active Users:334 Time:22/07/2025 10:44:55 PM
Perhaps "dwarf" or "surpass," but "eclipse" is a perfectly cromulent word. Joel Send a noteboard - 12/06/2012 07:51:26 PM
Sorry your editors English is not as good as yours. She is right that scholarly writing should avoid colloquialism, but your usage of "eclipse" is wholly orthodox; the more specific astronomical usage is a mere product of the original broader meaning. Unfortunately, if she rejected "eclipse" as colloquial she could do the same with "dwarf." Also, "dwarf" may overstate the disparity you reference, which would make "surpass" better, and closer to the literal meaning of "eclipse.

Aeryns suggestion of "exceed" is obviously good also, but I slightly disagree with her second one: If it were me (which it is not) I would write it as you did—then realize when editing that "well" by itself intensifies "may," so adding "very" is just gilding the lily. My personal opinion is that, if any part of your sentence is too informal, it is "might (very) well," not "eclipse." That is not to say I see anything wrong with the sentence, only that I find it ironic your editor objected to an indisputably valid usage while ignoring a more debatable one.
Honorbound and honored to be Bonded to Mahtaliel Sedai
Last First in wotmania Chat
Slightly better than chocolate.

Love still can't be coerced.
Please Don't Eat the Newbies!

LoL. Be well, RAFOlk.
Reply to message
Synonym wanted - 12/06/2012 08:46:37 AM 692 Views
Outstrip? *NM* - 12/06/2012 10:51:24 AM 263 Views
exceed. And simplify "might very well" into "may" *NM* - 12/06/2012 01:52:23 PM 171 Views
Outweigh, counterbalance, overwhelm, invalidate, nullify, make insignificant - 12/06/2012 03:25:16 PM 463 Views
This. *NM* - 12/06/2012 04:38:55 PM 172 Views
Not stupid, just no native speaker. - 12/06/2012 07:29:43 PM 392 Views
And speaks what...Hungarian? - 13/06/2012 07:07:33 AM 442 Views
My impression is she understood it, but questions the legitimacy of its general definition. - 12/06/2012 08:11:58 PM 380 Views
No, that's still ignorance. - 12/06/2012 08:51:50 PM 360 Views
Perhaps, technically, it is ignorance AS inexperience. - 12/06/2012 10:08:46 PM 392 Views
Perhaps "dwarf" or "surpass," but "eclipse" is a perfectly cromulent word. - 12/06/2012 07:51:26 PM 515 Views
Agreed, they embiggen the vocabulary *NM* - 13/06/2012 01:16:41 PM 190 Views
I am curious now how this ended. - 29/06/2012 04:02:08 AM 439 Views
You could just ask Pepijn directly instead of me ya know - 29/06/2012 10:55:30 AM 342 Views
Good plan. - 29/06/2012 10:59:30 AM 361 Views
"Bosh." - 30/06/2012 10:12:20 PM 426 Views

Reply to Message