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How to Write Good

Posted: Fri Nov 12, 2010 8:26 pm
by Ken G
I've had this laying around for 15 years. They're funny because they're true.
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Here are several very important but often forgotten rules of English:

1. Avoid alliteration. Always.

2. Prepositions are not words to end sentences with.

3. Avoid cliches like the plague. (They're old hat.)

4. Employ the vernacular.

5. Eschew ampersands & abbreviations, etc.

6. Parenthetical remarks (however relevant) are unnecessary.

7. It is wrong to ever split an infinitive.

8. Contractions aren't necessary.

9. Foreign words and phrases are not apropos.

10. One should never generalize.

11. Eliminate quotations. As Ralph Waldo Emerson once said: "I hate quotations. Tell me what you know."

12. Comparisons are as bad as cliches.

13. Don't be redundant; don't use more words than necessary; it's highly superfluous.

14. Profanity sucks.

15. Be more or less specific.

16. Understatement is always best.

17. Exaggeration is a billion times worse than understatement.

18. One-word sentences? Eliminate.

19. Analogies in writing are like feathers on a snake.

20. The passive voice is to be avoided.

21. Go around the barn at high noon to avoid colloquialisms.

22. Even if a mixed metaphor sings, it should be derailed.

23. Who needs rhetorical questions?

24. While a transcendent vocabulary is laudable, one must nevertheless keep incessant surveillance against such loquacious, effusive, voluble verbosity that the calculated objective of communication becomes ensconced in obscurity.

25. In a sentence, the nouns has to match the verbs.

26. Don't use no double negatives.

27. In writing, few things are, so to speak, more infuriating, than, say, commas, at least when there are too many of them, or when they should be, say, semicolons.

28. Proofread your work, so you don't leave some out or forget to finish

29. Run-on sentences are really bad because the reader saturates and what you really should be doing is using commas and semicolons and even periods to break the sentence up into more digestible chunks.

30. To have been using excessively complex verb constructions, is to have been bopping the literary baloney.

31. A friend I spoken with recently told me he been forgetting his helper verbs.

Re: How to Write Good

Posted: Sat Nov 13, 2010 7:28 pm
by Cory
I like this!

Re: How to Write Good

Posted: Sat Nov 13, 2010 9:20 pm
by Ken G
The one I do the most is #20. The passive voice is to be avoided.

That's going to be the tough one for me.

That and the bullshit about using damn profanities. What the hell do they know.

Re: How to Write Good

Posted: Mon Nov 15, 2010 2:31 am
by Norm Minas
I write like I talk. Any other way wouldn't be me.

Question authority.

Re: How to Write Good

Posted: Mon Nov 15, 2010 11:12 am
by Ken G
I have to write like I think. The other way around and most of it would be unprintable and the only ones that would understand it most of the time would be true Chicagoans, specifically southwest siders.

Ya see dem tree trees? Ya wanna go fish em over by dere.

Re: How to Write Good

Posted: Thu Nov 18, 2010 9:42 am
by Norm Minas
Unnerstan

Re: How to Write Good

Posted: Thu Nov 18, 2010 7:17 pm
by Fishin Musician
Word :ugeek: up Ken Bellwooood grammar

Re: How to Write Good

Posted: Fri Nov 19, 2010 11:30 am
by ThunderStick
I try to use the word "jagoff" daily. It keeps me real.