Tuesday, October 22, 2019
5 Tips for Cleaning Up Your Writing Right Now
5 Tips for Cleaning Up Your Writing Right Now 5 Tips for Cleaning Up Your Writing Right Now 5 Tips for Cleaning Up Your Writing Right Now By Mark Nichol Here are five quantitative quick tips about improving your writing functionally, before you even get into improving the quality of your prose: 1. Always Use Serial Commas The policy of preceding every item in a list but the last one with a comma is commonsensical (read a previous article about the serial comma). Confusion is possible when you donââ¬â¢t and highly unlikely when you do. What if, using a non-serial-comma style, you write about more than two things when one of the things consists of more than one part or ingredient? (ââ¬Å"The choices are roast beef, turkey, and ham and cheese.â⬠) Do you insert a serial comma for clarity (and introduce an inconsistency) or leave the sentence as is for readers to stumble on? Adherence to serial-comma style eliminates the dilemma. 2. Minimize Capitalization Job titles are capitalized only before names. Names of academic majors arenââ¬â¢t capitalized unless they are already proper nouns, like names of languages (ââ¬Å"Englishâ⬠) or references to regions (ââ¬Å"Asian studiesâ⬠). Generic names of entities (ââ¬Å"the hospital,â⬠ââ¬Å"the organization,â⬠and so on) are lowercased. Yes, capitalization is a minefield; when in doubt, look it up, and search on this site for ââ¬Å"capitalizationâ⬠for many articles on the topic (including this one). 3. Repair Comma Splices A comma alone cannot separate two independent clauses in a sentence. Break the clauses into distinct sentences, or separate them with a semicolon or an em dash or a comma and a conjunction (and, or, and so on) but not with a comma alone. For more information on this topic read 5 Ways to Fix the Comma Splice. 4. Omit Extraneous Hyphens, and Insert Necessary Ones ââ¬Å"Decision making,â⬠ââ¬Å"problem solving,â⬠and similar compound nouns require no hyphen, unless they precede a noun as a compound modifier (ââ¬Å"decision-making procedure,â⬠ââ¬Å"problem-solving aptitudeâ⬠). ââ¬Å"Near collisionâ⬠and other similar constructions donââ¬â¢t, either, with the same exception (ââ¬Å"near-collision statisticsâ⬠). Established compound modifiers usually donââ¬â¢t require a hyphen even before a noun (ââ¬Å"high school studentâ⬠). Confused? Hereââ¬â¢s a simple rule: Look it up. (And check out this DailyWritingTips article and find others on the topic by searching on the site for ââ¬Å"hyphens.â⬠) 5. Limit Displays of Emphasis Words can be italicized to indicate that they are being used to refer to themselves, not the things they stand for (ââ¬Å"Note the word emphasisâ⬠), or to signal a foreign term (ââ¬Å"Wunderbar means ââ¬Å"wonderfulâ⬠), or to make sure the reader understands that something is really important. Words can be initial-capped to indicate irony or other humorous intent. (ââ¬Å"The rent-a-cop exuded the air of an Authority Figure.â⬠) Boldface is appropriate for introducing new vocabulary or otherwise calling attention to an unfamiliar term but is best limited to textbooks and guidebooks. But all-caps are invariably excessive, ââ¬Å"scare quotesâ⬠are seldom necessary, and be judicious about otherwise calling attention to words and phrases. You can read a previous article on this post titled How to Add Emphasis to Your Writing. Want to improve your English in five minutes a day? Get a subscription and start receiving our writing tips and exercises daily! Keep learning! Browse the Writing Basics category, check our popular posts, or choose a related post below:100 Mostly Small But Expressive InterjectionsSocial vs. Societal5 Erroneously Constructed ââ¬Å"Not Only . . . But Alsoâ⬠Sentences
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