Post by account_disabled on Nov 29, 2023 0:13:46 GMT -6
Story there are parts that are certainly not easy to write, parts in which words seem not to be enough, they seem to reduce what we want to say to a minimum. I'm not prepared here, at all. I often tend to solve things too simplistically, when instead we should draw some guidelines and then go back to that piece until it works. Rating: 4. #6 – When you write, disconnect from the rest of the world It's a problem. This is why I would like to live in a house in the countryside, in the middle of the woods, with neighbors at least 500 meters away. I could close myself off to write and disconnect from the internet and everything else. Now it's impossible for me. I live in a hyper-traffic area of Rome, with confusion from 6.30am until 2am sometimes.
What do you want to detach, professor? Rating: 4. #7 – Don't be presumptuous King talks about not dressing up your writing with vocabulary. He defends simple writing, and here I agree with him. Even in blogging, many say that you shouldn't use big words to embellish the text. True: not to beautify, but if they are needed they should be used. Those are the words, after all. The refinement of language, for me, Phone Number Data must be contextualized. Rating: 8. #8 – Avoid adverbs and long paragraphs Ok, let's talk about adverbs. King condemns those in the dialogue and he is right. “He said softly”, “he replied calmly”, “he shouted beastly”, etc. Obscenity, right? Paragraphs: Sometimes I tend to write long ones, but I try to keep the right pace for reading. However, I like them and too many short paragraphs in a text give me the idea of fragmented writing.
Rating: 8. #9 – Don't get too caught up in grammar Mmm… King, what are you up to? I say it depends. Grammar is fundamental, we all know it, but, for example, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is told in an ungrammatical way, because it is Huck who speaks and he is not as literate as Twain. In dialogues between uncultured people, grammatical errors are obligatory. Just like in the language of children. Rating: 10. #10 – Master the art of description I remember the first fantasy novels I read: broad descriptions of places and weather. Not anymore now. In some cases I avoid descriptions entirely and that doesn't mean mastering them. In the ebook I'm writing I will have to review many parts, which need description.
What do you want to detach, professor? Rating: 4. #7 – Don't be presumptuous King talks about not dressing up your writing with vocabulary. He defends simple writing, and here I agree with him. Even in blogging, many say that you shouldn't use big words to embellish the text. True: not to beautify, but if they are needed they should be used. Those are the words, after all. The refinement of language, for me, Phone Number Data must be contextualized. Rating: 8. #8 – Avoid adverbs and long paragraphs Ok, let's talk about adverbs. King condemns those in the dialogue and he is right. “He said softly”, “he replied calmly”, “he shouted beastly”, etc. Obscenity, right? Paragraphs: Sometimes I tend to write long ones, but I try to keep the right pace for reading. However, I like them and too many short paragraphs in a text give me the idea of fragmented writing.
Rating: 8. #9 – Don't get too caught up in grammar Mmm… King, what are you up to? I say it depends. Grammar is fundamental, we all know it, but, for example, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is told in an ungrammatical way, because it is Huck who speaks and he is not as literate as Twain. In dialogues between uncultured people, grammatical errors are obligatory. Just like in the language of children. Rating: 10. #10 – Master the art of description I remember the first fantasy novels I read: broad descriptions of places and weather. Not anymore now. In some cases I avoid descriptions entirely and that doesn't mean mastering them. In the ebook I'm writing I will have to review many parts, which need description.