From Megan Stone, via Heidi Harley:
A friend of mine, who was an English major with me in undergrad, runs the Twitter account for MBTA, the Boston public transportation system. This morning, she posted the following: “#MBTA #OrangeLine Svc is suspended at DTX due to a Medical Emergency. For Green Line Svc, please board at Park St. http://bit.ly/1c6GJEk”. And a follower replied: “@MBTA BECAUSE OF a medical emergency NOT due to one! The use of due to REQUIRES a fiduciary (that means $$) responsibility. #GrammarMatters”. Now, I know my ridiculous prescriptivist rules pretty well, between being one (a prescriptivist, not a rule) for most of my life and following LLog, but I’d never heard this one. So, I did what any responsible language scientist would do; I googled diligently to see what might be underlying this guy’s claim. What I found were several people railing about the differences between “due to” and “because of” in a different sense: apparently “due to” is supposed to head an adjectival phrase, while “because of” heads an adverbial one. As such, @MBTA’s use of “due to” was technically incorrect, but for a totally different reason. (See, for example, this page.) What I did NOT find was anyone who even mentioned this “fiduciary” business.
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