One Word or even an alphabet in a Word
May
lead to Endless Consequences
Avoid
Blunders: Write Right English by Vinay Bhushan
Reflective
Review by Vanam Jwala Narasimha Rao
(May Month 20, 2026)
Language
is essentially a tool of communication. It mirrors one's personality,
intellect, discipline, and awareness. In an everchanging scenario, in spite of ‘Artificial
Intelligence Dominated knowledge’ even one single misplaced or misspelled word
can alter the entire perception and comprehension, more quickly than a flawed
argument. In this context, ‘Avoid Blunders: Write Right English by Vinay
Bhushan Bhagwaty emerges as a practical, thoughtful, and amazingly engaging
handbook that addresses the common flaws that creep into corrospondence in a disciplined
manner. Vinay concluded with a caution: ‘A Word can
make a World of Difference.’
Write
Right English
functions as a psychological study of linguistic confusion, a professional
survival manual, and a confidence-building companion for anyone who pens in
English regularly. I personally inhaled this fact, the minute I completed browsing
it non-stop. The author’s intention never
appeared like fashioning literary scholars.
Instead, he focused on ordinary, maybe even extraordinary writers to
avoid simple, but damaging mistakes, inadvertently. The foreword rightly
observes that in written communication, ‘what we write becomes our face and it
is final,’ capturing the philosophical
foundation of the entire work.
Before reviewing the book, recalling the opening remarks about
English Language, by Dr S Krishnaswamy for his monumental four-hour historical
1976 documentary film, Indus Valley to Indira Gandhi is relevant. Krishnaswamy
himself wrote, directed, and narrated in English, to tell India's
5,000-year-old story. While introducing it, he reasons that English has
effectively become an Indian language through its adoption, purpose,
and integration into the fabric of India.
He explained that while English was originally brought to
the subcontinent by British colonisers, it evolved to bridge the gap between
India's hundreds of diverse, localized languages. He pointed out the profound
historical irony that the very language used to colonize India was ultimately
adopted by India’s freedom fighters to communicate with one another, organize
across different regions, and demand independence from the British. He asserts
that, English was utilized to unify a diverse country and document its modern
constitution.
What Krishnaswamy said was absolutely correct. Thomas
Babington Macaulay Initially introduced the English Education Act of 1835,
establishing English as the medium of instruction for higher education in
India. He did this to create an elite class of Anglicized intermediaries who
could assist British Colonial Administration. Gradually it evolved into the
language of intellectual discourse, science, trade, courts, and eventually
aspiration itself.
After independence, English further advanced into a
bridge language across India’s extraordinary linguistic diversity. It has
transformed into a living social force influencing careers, confidence, status,
and communication. Emails, interviews, examinations, corporate interactions,
academic writing, digital conversations etc. increasingly depend upon it. Hence,
every sentence and every word carries weight. Especially, a misplaced or
misspelled word may alter meaning, weaken authority, or create unintended embarrassment.
It is within this atmosphere of linguistic caution and
growing dependence on correct communication, the book authored by Vinay Bhushan
Bhagwaty, titled ‘Avoid Blunders: Write Right English’ becomes essentially
pertinent. The author appears fully conscious of modern linguistic reality. His
purpose is not to explain syntax, but to protect readers from avoidable errors
that may silently damage credibility in professional and social life. Therefore,
the importance of Vinay Bhushan Bhagwaty’s immaculately crafted book is
unparalleled.
The author repeatedly stresses that people judge
competence through writing, whether such judgment is fair or not, and in that order,
he attempts to enrich readers. The introductory section, ‘Why One Word Matters,’ is
perhaps the emotional and intellectual gateway to the book. The author begins
with relatable modern examples like writing ‘Please ADVICE me’ instead of ‘Please
ADVISE me.’ The monk’s anecdote: ‘Nun
takes care of Monk’s needs’ instead of ‘None takes care of my needs’ not only humorous
on the surface, but also deeply revealing about how a single word can produce
scandal, confusion, and reputational damage.
Through such illustrations, the author demonstrates that
language errors are not merely academic issues. They affect human perception,
social respectability, and professional image. What makes this book especially
effective is its accessibility. The language is conversational rather than
scholarly. The direct approach of the author, prevents the book from becoming
preachy or intimidating. Structurally, the book is arranged with intelligent
progression. ‘The Fatal Five,’ tackles the most common errors such as ‘advice
vs advise, lose vs loose, and later vs latter.’
In these chapters which are not overloaded, every
confusing pair is explained through meaning, memory techniques, and practical
examples. For instance, the explanation that ‘You take advice; somebody advises
you’ is simple enough to remain permanently etched in memory. Similarly, the
discussion on ‘lose and loose’ demonstrates how a single additional letter can
completely destroy meaning. In ‘Setting the Context’ chapter, Vinay explains
how the brain naturally falls for look-alikes, homophones, and near-homophones
because of mental shortcuts. This psychological insight
gives the book unusual depth.
It transforms the work from a simple dictionary of
corrections into a study of why human beings commit language mistakes in the
first place. Another strength lies in the categorization of errors. Chapters
such as ‘The Confidence Killers, Everyday Slipups, The Lookalikes That Fool
Everyone, and Soundalike Traps’ provide thematic clarity. The reader is not
merely memorizing random corrections, but understanding families of confusion.
The author carefully explains why even good writers are confused in using ‘it’s
and its.’ Similarly, in the ‘effect vs affect’ section, he asserts
that even educated people are prone to confusion using these words.
The book’s examples are practical and drawn from
real-world situations, featuring corporate emails, client proposals, resumes,
school essays, legal communication, and workplace interactions. This reflects
the author’s understanding that modern English is judged in professional
environments rather than classrooms. An admirable feature is the balance
between seriousness and readability; the text continuously educates the reader
without ever becoming dry.
The examples involving ‘moral, morale, mural; adapt,
adopt, adept; or sight, site, cite’ are not only informative but enjoyable
to read. Readers may unexpectedly discover how many errors
they themselves commit unconsciously. The sections on ‘High-Stakes Words’ and ‘The
Precision Zone’ are especially valuable for professionals, students preparing
for competitive examinations, lawyers, administrators, and business executives.
Confusions such as ‘tenant vs tenet; annual vs annul; assess vs access; and
appraise vs apprise’ are not casual errors. They can create serious
misunderstanding in formal communication.
The author appears particularly concerned about
professional credibility, repeatedly warning readers that wrong word usage can
make them appear careless or incompetent. An interesting aspect of the author’s
method is that he does not merely provide definitions. He also supplies memory
anchors. For example, morale ends with ‘E’ connected with ‘energy’ while ‘conscience’
becomes ‘that inner voice.’ These mnemonic devices
transform the book from passive reading material into an active learning guide.
The book repeats similar warnings.
The book’s greatest contribution lies in its motivational
undertone running throughout the text and transforming what could have been a
dull corrective manual into a lively companion for self-improvement. The book perfectly
understands a truth that similar books ignore. Book’s central philosophy: ‘one
word really can change everything’ is laudable. While the book succeeds in all
aspects, the author, in future editions, may consider incorporating a slightly
deeper exploration of the historical evolution and psychological peculiarities
of English itself and why the language so frequently invites confusion. Probably
Krishnaswamy’s quotes may be included to explain.
I cannot conclude the
review, without recalling the influence of the author’s illustrious late
father, BK Rao, whose command on ‘English Language is Exemplary,’
that left people spellbound. In many ways, this book appears to
carry forward that same legacy of linguistic clarity, discipline, and respect
for precise expression. How can anyone forget his usage of the word ‘Righteous
Indignation.’

















