Join Platy’S Readwise Highlights
A batch of the best highlights from what Platy's read, .
NY, for me, has always been about the people. In my 20s it was also a bit about the texture — the incredible, rich, stone-built texture to it all. I stood in constant, delighted, wonder. Sam mentioned how he was walking near Washington Square Park with a professor after arriving in New York and asked him if he ever got tired of this — this vaulted endless wow. I’m still saying wow, all these years later. Mainly in contrast to Tokyo’s relatively demure landscape of steel and glass, little stone. (Stones and quakes don’t mix well.) But the texture was just a bonus, the people were always primary.
New York City — Roden Newsletter Issue 079
craigmod.com
In American English, “counsel” and “counselor” are both, in one sense, general terms meaning “one who gives (legal) advice,” the latter being the more formal term. “Counsel” may refer to but one lawyer {opposing counsel says} or, as a plural, to more than one lawyer {opposing counsel say}.
Garner’s Usage Tip of the Day: Lawyer; Attorney; Counsel; Counselor. – LawProse
lawprose.org
Participants still wanted to reach their networks on mainstream social platforms, and were influenced by the norms and expectations of these platforms when deciding what to post.
Social Web in the Wild
dr.amy.gy
...catch up on these, and many more highlights