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NL888 Posted 12 years ago
Grammar

Proof of the old chestnut?

1) Does " proof of the old chestnut" mean what?
2) Does "every hack with a keyboard" mean "every hit on a keyboard"?

Context:

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The diplomatic memoir is an even bigger hurdle, for diplomats by definition are, well, diplomatic. (Hardly anyone actually really read Dean Acheson’s 1969 memoir but every hack with a keyboard, including this typist, has quoted, and misapplied, its title: “Present at the Creation.”)

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“Hard Choices’’ is destined to be a book that is purchased but not read, a volume given but not opened. Indeed, it is impossible to imagine very many of the more than 318 million Americans alive sitting down and reading the whole thing, unless, like me, they were paid to do so, and even I admit to skimming the chapter on Latin America — proof of the old chestnut, sometimes attributed to James Reston, that Americans will do anything for Latin America except read about it.
  

Top answer

NL888 1) Does " proof of the old chestnut" mean what? 'Old saying'—usually used derogatorily. NL888 2) Does "every hack with a keyboard" mean "every hit on a keyboard"?

  • NL888 1) Does " proof of the old chestnut" mean what?
  • 'Old saying'—usually used derogatorily.
  • NL888 2) Does "every hack with a keyboard" mean "every hit on a keyboard"?
  • No.
  • 'Every bad writer'.
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4 Answers
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NL8881) Does " proof of the old chestnut" mean what?
'Old saying'—usually used derogatorily.
NL8882) Does "every hack with a keyboard" mean "every hit on a keyboard"?
No. 'Every bad writer'.
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Thanks.
1) So "proof of the old chestnut" means "once again it proves the old saying"?
2) So "this typist" refers to Hillary Clinton?
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"This typist" refers to the author of the paragraph where the phrase appears.
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The question is that the author of the paragraph said "including this typist, has quoted, and misapplied, its title: “Present at the Creation.”"
If this typist was referred back to the author him/herself, he/she may correct the misapplication, not let it loose.

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