On Tue, Mar 22, 2011 at 4:58 AM, Lydia Pintscher <ly...@kde.org> wrote: > On Mon, Mar 21, 2011 at 20:42, Mark Kretschmann <kretschm...@kde.org> wrote: >> Looks good to me. >> >> One thing that I noticed while reading: It should be either "at any >> time", or "anytime". While "any time" is grammatically correct too, my >> impression is that this form isn't used much any more in contemporary >> English. >> >> Reference: >> "anytime, adv., = at any time; whenever. Some writers consider this >> term a CASUALISM, but it is highly convenient and has -- for whatever >> reason -- gained more widespread acceptance than anymore (in positive >> contexts) and anyplace. Garner's Modern American Usage" > > Good catch. What do the native speakers say about this? > > > Cheers > Lydia
'Anytime, anywhere' is nice, if not precisely correct. "Always, everywhere" would be correct, but doesn't have quite the nice rhythm of anytime, anywere. Valorie -- http://linuxgrandma.blogspot.com Last.fm, Facebook, Twitter, Identica, LinkedIn, Delicious: valoriez _______________________________________________ Amarok-devel mailing list Amarok-devel@kde.org https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/amarok-devel