more lost subjunctive; protest at
James Harbeck
jharbeck at SYMPATICO.CA
Sat Dec 1 03:47:46 UTC 2007
Headline on today's Telegraph:
Mob demands teacher is shot over teddy
This is about the British teacher in Sudan who let her pupils name a
teddy bear Mohammed.
The subhead on the website is "Thousands protest at sentence handed
to British teacher for 'insulting Islam'." Note "protest at" as well
-- a usage that to me seems newish; I see it a fair bit now, but seem
to recall, perhaps inaccurately, that "protest" without the "at" was
more common in times past. It's a bit of work to sort through uses in
archives, as most hits for "protest at" aren't using the preposition
with the verb this way -- it's either noun + prep or the "at" starts
the next sentence.
James Harbeck.
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