![]() In other words, I've boldly reverted you but I'm not 100% sure. I'm much better at hearing something and working out if it's correct or not than I am at getting at those formal rules of grammar locked up somewhere inside my head. In short: "I love the Messiah is wrong" (because it's simply called "Messiah") and "I love Messiah" is wrong (because it's ungrammatical), but "I love the Messiah" is correct. The "the"s in this entry, in other words, belong to the sentences, rather than to the title of the work. So we say: "My favourite symphony is the fifth." Or we love Wagner, so we say "I have always dreamed about conducting the Ring Cycle. ![]() Think about it: we want to talk about Beethoven's 5th symphony. I sort of like it like that but am not sure. ![]() It's now more correct but possibly odder-looking. Alas, we can't do much about the main title as there is already an article called simply "Messiah". Now to be even more nitpicky, there are three links to "The Messiah" instead of "Messiah". The correct title for this oratorio is not The Messiah, but simply Messiah.Īlright. 39 Hallelujah Chorus: the dreadful truth.24 "Language" section: Original research?.12 Hallelujah Chorus needs to be cleaned up.
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