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One way lawyers attract snarks — readers who aren’t shy about pointing out grammar and usage blunders — is by not learning how to properly use sentence adverbs.
It’s of course possible to memorize the rules that govern sentence adverbs, including how to avoid the nonstandard sentence adverbs that cause the most trouble.
But although good legal writers have learned how to properly use sentence adverbs, you’ll rarely find them in their legal writing. Why is that?
Good legal writers avoid sentence adverbs because they’ve learned that they often reveal a writer’s sentiments or biases, which distract readers and paradoxically weaken the ideas the writer is trying to convey.
What Are Sentence Adverbs?
Garner’s Modern American Usage defines a sentence adverb as a word that qualifies “an entire statement rather than a single word in the sentence.” Writers often use sentence adverbs to express their sentiments, feelings, emotions, or biases — e.g., “Regrettably, she could not attend class,” or “Frankly, my dear, I don’t give a damn.”
Most sentence adverbs are benign. But since the 1960s, the nonstandard use of two sentence adverbs — hopefully and thankfully — has caused a rift among the grammar and usage authorities.
Nonstandard Sentence Adverbs Are Abominations!
In The New Fowler’s Modern English Usage, Robert Burchfield recounts that an “unofficial war against certain uses of adverbs ending in -ly broke out in the late 1960s,” and that the most pitched battles have been over the nonstandard use of hopefully and thankfully.
As Bryan Garner explains, hopefully properly means in a hopeful manner. He notes that if a writer uses hopefully to mean I hope or It’s hoped, that nonstandard usage (a) erodes the traditional meaning of the word; (b) can result in ambiguity (“My relatives will be leaving soon hopefully.”); and (c) can nonsensically ascribe human emotions to a nonperson (“Hopefully, it won’t snow tomorrow.”).
Thankfully properly means in a manner expressing thanks; gratefully. But over time writers began using thankfully to mean thank goodness or I’m thankful that. If a writer is thankful, the purists insist, the writer should say I’m thankful that, fortunately, or thank goodness instead of thankfully.
The prescriptive Garner isn’t alone in condemning the nonstandard use of hopefully and thankfully:
Purists, Lighten Up!
Despite their fussing, many purists have conceded that they’ve lost the war over nonstandard sentence adverbs.
For instance, the reliably prescriptive Patricia O’Conner, in Origins of the Specious, says that writers shouldn’t fret about using hopefully to mean I hope that because hopefully ”has long since earned its right to be a sentence adverb. It’s so widely accepted because no other word does the job quite as well.’”
In 1979, the late William Safire — a self-described language maven — devoted a New York Times column to announce that he had broke rank with his doctrinaire colleagues by accepting the nonstandard use of hopefully. Safire explained that he had come to accept the nonstandard use of hopefully not because he accepted loose usage standards, but because he “embrace[d] time-tested and readily understood usage.”
The style manuals, though, have hedged their bets. The Associated Press Stylebook (2012) doesn’t take a position on thankfully; however, in April 2012 it reversed its position on hopefully, and now approves its nonstandard use. The Chicago Manual of Style (16th ed.) rejects the nonstandard use of thankfully. But it concedes that the nonstandard use of hopefully “seems here to stay,” while hedging that “many careful writers deplore the new meaning.”
Sentence Adverbs Don’t Enhance Legal Writing
Given the smoldering controversy over hopefully and thankfully, careful legal writers avoid them altogether because even if they use them correctly, they will alienate or confuse certain readers.
But careful legal writers also avoid all sentence adverbs that express a personal sentiment or bias because how a lawyer feels about a factual or legal contention is irrelevant. Consider this sentence from a hypothetical brief: “Surprisingly, the court considered extrinsic evidence when interpreting the contract.”
By qualifying the sentence with Surprisingly, the lawyer wants the judge to know that he was surprised that the court considered extrinsic evidence when interpreting the contract. But the judge reading the lawyer’s brief doesn’t care a whit about whether the lawyer was surprised that the court considered extrinsic evidence; the judge cares only that the court considered it, and wants to know how that ruling affects the case before him.
Despite the lawyer’s good intentions, Surprisingly adds nothing but distracting clutter.
Convey Your Emotions Through Your Writing, Not Sentence Adverbs
I’m aware that the primer above about the controversy swirling over the nonstandard use of hopefully and thankfully may have left some readers staring at the computer screen, eyes glazed over. Yet there’s value in knowing that the controversy lingers, and that it’s best to avoid becoming embroiled in it.
But there’s no controversy over avoiding most sentence adverbs in legal writing. Instead editorializing your prose with sentence adverbs, convey your feelings and emotions through compelling writing. If you’re writing persuasively, you won’t need a sentence adverb to let your readers know you feel.
* For more on using adverbs in legal writing, see these other recent Lawyerist columns: Be Safe When Using Flat Adverbs, Eschewing Comfort Words in Legal Writing, and Scrubbing Adverbs From Legal Writing.
(photo: http://www.flickr.com/photos/83633410@N07/7658298768/sizes/m/in/photostream/)
The Pitfalls of Sentence Adverbs in Legal Writing is a post from the law firm marketing blog, Lawyerist.com
2013-01-09 12:05:28
Source: http://lawyerist.com/the-pitfalls-of-sentence-adverbs-in-legal-writing/