Alright vs. All Right | WritersDigest.com
I had to look this up because I've been thinking about it a lot (alot?) HA! Anyway, here's the deal...
This:
Is this posting too long, or is it alright?
Looks good to me. As in, it appears the word "alright" means what we all think it means, that something is satisfactory.
But this:
The posting is all right.
Makes me think about accuracy, not satisfactory-ness (sue me, I'm done with thinking today, it's late).
So I know now that "alright" isn't a "word"...you know, like in the dictionary, but I've seen it plenty in books and several sources give a definition for it (a separate definition than "all right," which means something more like all correct)...so where does that leave us?
Do you use alright or all right? Is there a definitive reason for either? Does...you know...not being included in a dictionary keep a word from being okay in writing? I'm only asking because "snuck" didn't used to be a word, but it now IS. Along with ain't, and others.
I'm just interested in hearing your thoughts because up till now (ha! till is another one), I've been writing "alright" in the places where I mean satisfactory ("Are you alright?" The stranger looked alright after skidding to a stop ten feet form his motorcycle AND The play was alright, but Dan wouldn't pay to see it a second time) and it looks so much more appropriate than "all right."
Thoughts?
I had to look this up because I've been thinking about it a lot (alot?) HA! Anyway, here's the deal...
This:
Is this posting too long, or is it alright?
Looks good to me. As in, it appears the word "alright" means what we all think it means, that something is satisfactory.
But this:
The posting is all right.
Makes me think about accuracy, not satisfactory-ness (sue me, I'm done with thinking today, it's late).
So I know now that "alright" isn't a "word"...you know, like in the dictionary, but I've seen it plenty in books and several sources give a definition for it (a separate definition than "all right," which means something more like all correct)...so where does that leave us?
Do you use alright or all right? Is there a definitive reason for either? Does...you know...not being included in a dictionary keep a word from being okay in writing? I'm only asking because "snuck" didn't used to be a word, but it now IS. Along with ain't, and others.
I'm just interested in hearing your thoughts because up till now (ha! till is another one), I've been writing "alright" in the places where I mean satisfactory ("Are you alright?" The stranger looked alright after skidding to a stop ten feet form his motorcycle AND The play was alright, but Dan wouldn't pay to see it a second time) and it looks so much more appropriate than "all right."
Thoughts?
Myth Weaver
Auror
Sage