MrNate
Well-Known Member
...you seem pretty defensive and only want to hear things that are agreeable with your position.
Next time I voice an opinion, I'll not defend my position. Does that make more sense to you or less?
First, when I'm grading 150 essays over the weekend, I'll use the same technique you're complaining about. I balance that with margin notes and notes at the end of the paper with comments on the paper as a whole, but I do not have the time or the inclination to explain every mistake to students I teach.
Yeah, work is hard. Cutting corners is the way to go.
Secondly, I want to respond to the sentence in question. I would mark this as well. It wouldn't be because I didn't understand the word, but because I do and I'm questioning your syntax and style. Hubris is a noun and you do use it as such in your sentence. However, that is about as far as I would consider the correctness of its use. Typically, hubris is something one is considered as being guilty of, not in possession of. Therefore, to misplace one's hubris suggests that there is an appropriate placement of hubris, which the definition of the word does not support.
Thank you for your feedback. I respectfully disagree with the fundamental idea you have based it on, but at least it's feedback.
Thanks, Onan.Good luck, Icarus.