https://nybookeditors.com/2018/04/tips-for-balancing-characterization-with-plot/?inf_contact_key=331e10f6d16b5397f90034c14e23c83b1646d2a31707f1110ebc771fb276e050
Cut All The Adjectives & Adverbs. Why It’s Nonsense, And When It Isn’t
Emma Darwin “Cut All The Adjectives & Adverbs”. Why It’s Nonsense, And When It Isn’t Cut all the adjectives & adverbs” is right up there with “Show, don’t Tell”, as one of the first “rules” that new writers get told, and for similar reasons. And although it’s perhaps responsible for more bland, threadbare writing than almost
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Being Published: Editing
Emma Darwin BEING EDITED If you’ve ever had good, experienced feedback on your work, in some ways being edited by a publisher isn’t that different. It can even be better, because a professional editor’s basic duty is to help you write the book that you thought you’d already written – and why wouldn’t you want
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Quotation Marks and Dialogue
Quotation marks are used to identify words that someone has said. You’ll often find them in fiction, where they signify dialogue, the words spoken by the characters. In newspapers, journalists use quotation marks to signify that something is a direct quote from a person in the article. In academic papers, quotation marks can signify that you
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Five foot two, hyphens too?
Q: Woe Is I saved me from an “I”-versus-“me” embarrassment in a murder mystery I wrote. But I can’t find anything in Pat’s grammar book about “six foot ladder” and “five feet two” questions. I’m on the side of not using hyphens in these cases. Hope to gain a bit of insight from you. A: This is
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