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Amusing verses that shine a light on mostly medical and grammatical topics

​When proofreading with an eye to perfection, there really is no substitute for good research. While one is always guided by the client's stated preferences regarding style, there is also a baseline understanding that serves as the foundation against which required differences are compared.

I will be offering some home-grown verses here that may be helpful for keeping certain basics in mind while adapting to the guidelines of a specific project, whether under the umbrella of CMOS, AP, APA, MLA, or other guidance.

They are not intended to be comprehensive regarding any particular issue. Rather, the purpose is to draw attention to identifiable aspects that are worth noting and make them memorable.

I think of these verses tongue in cheek as "Grammar Grist." Others that you find here will be more along the lines of "Medical Musings"; some might even qualify as a combination of the two.

It'll be fun. So, let's do it. Share the cheer everywhere.


© 2022 - 2026 Medillumina 
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(A proofreader's note on “team” and “teem,” including reference to the liquid-related meanings of the latter)

So teemed with honors the stellar team
That tenured teachers cheered,
All eyes agleam with wondrous sheen,
Reflecting prospects shared.

Emotions felt by some were more,
To swollen flow sustain;
They teemed from pools of limpid mood,
Supplying their own champagne.

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(A proofreader's note regarding “breach” and “breech”)

To every wall a soul would “breach,”
A man must break from rut;
For every birth that dares to “breech,”
A baby lands with butt.

A “breach” relates to breaking through,
A broken rule or hole;
The violation thus involved
Could bear a hefty toll.

Position though defines a “breech,”
Including bottom pants;
The britches at your rearward end
Are breeches placed by hands.

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​(A proofreader's note regarding “deprivation” and “depravation”)

The damaging lack in “deprivation”
Has moral corruption none,
But wickedness in “depravation”
Is gradually sown and grown.

“Deprive” implies withhold from having,
Thus cuing thoughts of “lack”;
“Deprave” paves way to corruption certain,
As real as a mortal attack.

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(A proofreader's note regarding “enumerable” and “innumerable.”)

“Enumerable” is to enumerate
As countable is to count;
But with the word “innumerable,”
Futility must abound.

It says “too many” in number to count,
While “numerous” says “many.”
Innumerable are the stars above,
More mighty in number than any.

By virtue of its very size
Or lack of finite bounds,
That number is non-countable,
Despite the awe it crowns.

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(A proofreader's note on “discreet” and “discrete.”)

Although the plan was now complete,
Its crafters had been too discreet;
Some members mocked the pure conceit 
Of those who worked on crew discrete.

This latter few, to be discreet,
Had kept all parley close indeed,
And members of the trusted group
Were individual “joes” by creed,

Whose lives were separate, thus “discrete.”
If separation is implied,
A gap between the e's is clue,
Enforced by “t” and safely plied;

But when the two are cheek by jowl,
The word expressed must be “discreet,”
Judiciousness in act or speech,
With emphasis on silence neat.

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​(A proofreader's note regarding “elude” and “allude.")

The hunted dude hid shy of shoe,
Deliberate in the nude;
His exit with the bodies bare
Would all pursuit elude.

Illusiveness no less was sought,
In desperate bid to flee.
The prospect brought a heady rush;
One couldn’t wait to see.

And so this tale would merely hint
The meaning of “elude,”
Which thereby is “alluded” to,
As literary food.

Indeed, restricted to “allude”
We kept the telling true,
Not offering up its friend “elude”
But surely hinting through.

Adroit avoidance with “elude”
Is commonly what's meant,
Though “fail to be attain-ed by”
Is often the intent.

“The championship eludes them still.”
“A nap eludes the coach.”
“A certain rule eludes the kids.”
“Free pass eludes the roach.”




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(A proofreader's note regarding “comprise” and “compose.”)

A Role in the Whole

Each part must play a given role
In every thing that's whole;
The whole of it comprises parts 
That constitute the whole.

Together they compose the whole,
Whatever role the whole;
The role may be to touch the soul,
A goal we all extoll.

But even goals within the whole
Of smaller roles consist;
The greater whole they thus compose,
Enabling to subsist.

Let's take as example a plant much revered
For fragrance and medicine both;
The lilac comprises many surprises,
From scent to hue to growth.

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(A proofreader's note regarding “censor” and “censure.”) 

(Editing that occurs without a governmental mandate may not strictly qualify as censoring. Furthermore, “censuring” does not involve actual suppression of content but, rather, a near condemnation of one's actions/behavior.)

The incense from a single censer
Perfumed the gloomy room
Wherein he sat, the aging censor,
Reviewing writs to doom.

Religious fervor struck the project,
Though government enjoined,
And gave the opposition members
A way to make a point.

It took the form of devious censure
Against the censor turned;
Withdrawn and fairly quiet by nature,
The aging censor burned.

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(A proofreader's note regarding “appraise” and “apprise”)

Two verbs that “diff” by single vowel
“Apprise” and sibling are;
The “a” that makes “appraise” more senior
Adds age and wisdom far.

By virtue of this dispensation,
It aims to scrutinize;
And thus “appraise” involves assessment,
Achieved by critical eyes.

“Appraise” may therefore be praising or razing,
Depending on its end.
“Apprise,” instead, is mostly a telling,
Though gain-in-value friend.

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(A proofreader's note on “blatant” and “flagrant”)

The “flagrant” and “blatant” will never be fragrant
But full of offensiveness both,
With “blatant” hinting this certain distinction,
“Served open like unto an oath.”

In terms of a scale of their badness or wrongness,
The “flagrant” is thought of as worse;
But given the outcome as clearly obtrusive,
Then “blatant” is rightly the curse.

Since that which is “blatant” is done in the open
Without the shame that's due,
The word emphasizes “offensively conspicuous”
And failure also to rue.

Thus, closely akin to “blatant” is “brazen,”
Which poses unashamed,
For “brazen” is rude with a boldness exceptional,
At level for it to be famed.