On Writing Well 11.6

Excerpt/Summary

This is a chapter of scraps and morsels.

VERBS

Use active verbs unless there is no comfortable way to get around using a passive verb.

Verbs are the most important of all your tools. They push the sentence forward and give it momentum.

Use precise verbs.

ADVERBS

Most adverbs are unnecessary.

Again and again in careless writing, strong verbs are weakened by redundant adverbs.

Don't use adverbs unless they do necessary work.

ADJECTIVES

Most adjectives are also unnecessary.

Make your adjectives do work that needs to be done.

LITTLE QUALIFIERS

They dilute your style and your persuasiveness.

Don't hedge your prose with little timidities. Good writing is lean and confident.

Readers want a writer who believes in himself and in what he is saying.

PUNCTUATION

If you don't know how to punctuate, get a grammar book.

    The Period:most writers don't reach it soon enough.      There is no minimum length for a sentence that's acceptable in the eyes of God.

    The Exclamation Point:Don't use it unless you must to achieve a certain effect.    Construct your sentence so that the order of the words will put the emphasis where you want it.Also resist using an exclamation point to notify the reader that you are making a joke or being ironic.

    The Semicolon:The semicolon brings the reader, if not to a halt, at least to a pause. So use it with discretion.

    The Dash:The dash is used in two ways. One is to amplify or justify in the second part of the sentence a thought you stated in the first part. The other use involves two dashes, which set apart a parenthetical thought within a longer sentence.

    The Colon:it still serves well its pure role of bringing your sentence to a brief halt before you plunge into, say, an itemized list.

MOOD CHANGERS

but:there's no stronger word (than but) at the start.

however:a weaker word and needs careful placement. Don't start a sentense with "however", and don't end with "however".Put it as early as you reasonably can.

yet:does almost the same job as "but", though its meaning is closer to "nevertheless". Either of those words at the beginning of a sentence.

meanwhile, now, today, later:Always make sure your readers are oriented. Always ask yourself where you left them in the previous sentence.

CONTRACTIONS

Your style will be warmer and truer to your personality if you use contractions. Suggest avoiding one form— "I'd," "he'd", "we'd", etc.— because "I'd" can mean both "I had" and "I would".

THAT AND WHICH

Always use "that" unless it makes your meaning ambiguous.

If your sentence needs a comma to achieve its precise meaning, it probably needs "which". "Which" serves a particular identifying function, different from "that".

CONCEPT NOUNS

Nouns that express a concept are commonly used in bad wrtiting instead of verbs that tell what somebody did.

Don't get caught holding a bag full of abstract nouns. You'll sink to the bottom of the lake and never be seen again.

CREEPING NOUNISM

Today as many as four or five concept will attach themselves to each other.

OVERSTATEMENT

Don't overstate.

Let the humor sneak up so we hardly hear it coming.

CREDIBILITY

Don't inflate an incident to make it more outlandish than it actually was.

DICTATION

Dictated sentences tend to be pompous, sloppy and redundant.

Making sure that what they finally write is a true reflection of who they are.

WRITING IS NOT A CONTEST

Forget the competition and go at your own pace. Your only contest is with yourself.

THE SUBCONSCIOUS MIND

Your subconscious mind does more writing than you think.

Stay alert to the currents around you. Much of what you see and hear will come back, having percolated for days or mouths or even years through your subconscious mind.


THE QUICKEST FIX

Surprisingly often a difficult problem in a sentence can be solved by simply getting rid of it.

PARAGERAPHS

Keep your paragraphs short.

But don't go berserk.A succession of tiny paragraphs is as annoying as a paragraph that's too long.

Each paragraph has its own integrity of content and structure.

Vocabulary

1.It's also ambiguous.

ambiguous:

that can be understand in more one way; having different meanings

not clearly stated or defined

反义:unambiguous

adv:ambiguously

2.Perhaps a monk's cell with wall-to-wall carpeting.

monk:a member of a male religious community that is usually separated from the outside world.

wall-to-wall:adj 覆盖全部地面;墙到墙的

A wall-to-wall carpet covers the floor of a room completely.

You can use wall-to-wall to describe something that fills or seems to fill all the available space.

3.In syntax and punctuation so that the reader knows where he is at every step of the winding trail.

syntax:the ways that words can be put together, or are put together, in order to make sentences.

punctuation:

the symbols that you use to divide written words into sentences and clauses.

the use of symbols such as full stops or periods, commas, or question marks to divide written words into sentences and clauses.

这一章是关于词性语法标点符号的使用。读的时候忍不住想起小学作文课上,老师写一黑板的语法,让大家记下来。现在模糊记得,连词就分了好多种,转折因果并列……英语写作与汉语写作——或者其他语种的写作——都离不开这些最基本的东西。不过作者关于but用在开头的说法,还真是有趣。尝试用书中句子进行总结,写完后觉得还是太啰嗦了。下一次要试着进行压缩或者提炼关键词。

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