Starmer In Jobs Push.....right Oh!
News1 min ago
No best answer has yet been selected by Moog. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.In actual usage, however - as in the Hutton nonsense currently going on - inquiry with an 'i' is generally used for a prolonged investigation whereas enquiry with an 'e' is normally used for a brief one-off question.
"Enquire. An alternative form of inquire. Modern dictionaries give inquire as the standard form but enquire is still frequently used in the sense 'to ask a question'."
That is precisely the definitionof 'enquire' that I offered above. Unless one expects to spend ages on Directory Enquiries - which does appear to be happening with all the new 118 numbers! - one is, in common usage, making a telephone-number enquiry and not an inquiry.
I have no objection to your disagreeing with me, Ma'am, so long as I do not find myself disagreeing with the OED! And I didn't.
The key linguistic and technical 'bibles' in this situation are both perfectly happy with the 'e'-version of the word in reference to one-off questions. Now, we should let Lord Hutton just get on with his prolonged inquiry! Cheers