a former author and...

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navi tasan

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1-This book is about a former author and journalist.
2-This book is about a former author and a journalist.

Which of the above correspond to which of the below:
a-the book is about two people
b-the book is about one person who is a former author and a former journalist
c-the book is about one person who is now a journalist and formerly an author

'2' could correspond to 'a'. I am not sure that it cannot correspond to 'b' as well.

'1' could correspond to 'b'. I am not sure it cannot correspond to 'c' as well.

Gratefully,
Navi
 
2 could be about two people. I'm not sure about former author- it doesn't seem to be an occupation that people quit much, so even when they no longer write, we don't use it.
 
1-This book is about a former author and journalist.
2-This book is about a former author and a journalist.

Which of the above correspond to which of the below:
a-the book is about two people
b-the book is about one person who is a former author and a former journalist
c-the book is about one person who is now a journalist and formerly an author

'2' could correspond to 'a'. I am not sure that it cannot correspond to 'b' as well.

'1' could correspond to 'b'. I am not sure it cannot correspond to 'c' as well.

Gratefully,
Navi

I read #1 as 1 person, and #2 as 2 people.
 
Thank you all very much.

1-This book is about a former author and journalist.

Can one tell if the person in question is a former journalist or a present-day journalist?

Many Thanks.
Navi.

 
Thank you all very much.

1-This book is about a former author and journalist.

Can one tell if the person in question is a former journalist or a present-day journalist?

Many Thanks.
Navi.


It is not completely clear, but, as written, "former" appears to apply to both nouns. If the person is still a journalist, it should have been written "a journalist and former author".
 
I still don't like 'former author'.

If Dan Brown never writes another word for the rest of his life he will always be an author.
 
I still don't like 'former author'.

If Dan Brown never writes another word for the rest of his life he will always be an author.

Will he? If my uncle, a master baker, hangs up his flour bag and never bakes another loaf of bread, will he always be a baker? I agree that he will have been a baker but not that he will remain one.
 
No offence to your uncle, however toothsome his baking might have been, but an author's work survives long after he has written his last book and later died.
 
Thank you all very much,

I think Mike has made a very good point. I like his logic. There is probably some slight ambiguity but if the person is still a journalist, the sentence could use some improvement.

I did not really think about 'former author' when I wrote the sentence. Now I feel uncomfortable with it.

How about 'a former author of love stories'? I think that will work, although the love stories an author of love stories writes might survive him.

I would think that even 'a former author of great masterpieces' might work... implying that these days he is writing worthless stuff!

Gratefully,
Navi.
 
Thank you all very much,

I think Mike has made a very good point. I like his logic. There is probably some slight ambiguity but if the person is still a journalist, the sentence could use some improvement.

I did not really think about 'former author' when I wrote the sentence. Now I feel uncomfortable with it.

How about 'a former author of love stories'? I think that will work, although the love stories an author of love stories writes might survive him.

I would think that even 'a former author of great masterpieces' might work... implying that these days he is writing worthless stuff!

Gratefully,
Navi.

I agree with the notion that an author's works live on, but I still think a person can become a former anything. A surgeon's patients can continue to live even after the surgeon retires. An actor's movies can live on even after the actor stops acting. A teacher's students will carry the knowledge even after the teacher retires. We all hope to leave a legacy.
 
Thank you very much Mike,

And please do not retire just yet! Leave a bigger legacy!

Respectfully,
Navi.
 
Arigatou gozaimasu.

For the benefit of any learners who might be confused, MikeNewYork's post is not in English. I think it's phonetically written Japanese for "Thank you" though I admit I'm mystified why he has directed the phrase at a native Armenian speaker! ;-)
 
For the benefit of any learners who might be confused, MikeNewYork's post is not in English. I think it's phonetically written Japanese for "Thank you" though I admit I'm mystified why he has directed the phrase at a native Armenian speaker! ;-)

If Navi was Armenian, it would surprise me also. :-D
 
Thank you all.

I am Armenian. But Mike's mistake is quite understandable. Navi is not an Armenian name as far as I know! It not my real name either.

'Navi' was an internet name I made up ages ago when I started using the net. It stayed with me.

I did understand what Mike meant though.

Respectfully,
Navi,
 
Maybe he meant շնորհակալություն. ;-)
 
I did not really think about 'former author' when I wrote the sentence. Now I feel uncomfortable with it.

JD Salinger didn't publish anything for decades, but I never heard him called this. Thomas Hardy did retire from writing novels and only wrote poetry, but again, he wasn't called this. I can see the argument for being able to be a former anything, but I do think that we look on some things in a different way, and being writer is seen as something other than a job.
 
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