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The Abridged Elements of Style

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The Abridged Elements of Style. Gerald B. Moulds (Taken from The Elements of Style by William Strunk Jr. and E.B. White). Part I : The Principles of Composition. The Paragraph. Make the paragraph the unit of composition. Each paragraph should address a single topic. The Paragraph. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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The Abridged Elements of Style Gerald B. Moulds (Taken from The Elements of Style by William Strunk Jr. and E.B. White)
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Page 1: The Abridged Elements of Style

The Abridged Elements of Style

Gerald B. Moulds

(Taken from The Elements of Style by William Strunk Jr. and E.B. White)

Page 2: The Abridged Elements of Style

Part I : The Principles of Composition

Page 3: The Abridged Elements of Style

The Paragraph

Make the paragraph the unit of composition.

Each paragraph should address a single topic.

Page 4: The Abridged Elements of Style

The Paragraph

Opening sentences (typically)

Suggest or provide the topic of the paragraph.

and/or

Serve as a transition between this paragraph and the previous paragraph.

Page 5: The Abridged Elements of Style

Paragraph size

Enormous blocks of text can be intimidating and readers tend to skim, rather than read them carefully.

At the same time, writing several short paragraphs in a row can make your ideas appear underdeveloped.

Page 6: The Abridged Elements of Style

Use the active voice

More direct More precise

Page 7: The Abridged Elements of Style

“I threw the ball.” “The ball was thrown by me.” “The ball was thrown.”

Page 8: The Abridged Elements of Style

Active vs. Passive Voice

Consider:

“There were a great number of dead leaves lying on the ground.”vs.

“Dead leaves covered the ground.”

“It was not long before she was very sorry that she had said what she had.”vs.

“She soon repented her words.”

Page 9: The Abridged Elements of Style

Put statements in positive form Negative form: “The author’s

evidence is not strong.” Positive form: “The author’s

evidence is weak.”

Page 10: The Abridged Elements of Style

Use definite, specific, concrete language. Provide details: information, flavor,

imagery. Writing is about conveying specific

information.

“A period of unfavorable weather set in.”vs.

“It rained every day for a week.”

Page 11: The Abridged Elements of Style

Ecclesiastics - Quote #1: (George Orwell) "Objective consideration of

contemporary phenomena compels the conclusion that success or failure in competitive activities exhibits no tendency to be commensurate with innate capacity, but that a considerable element of the unpredictable must inevitably be taken into account.”

Page 12: The Abridged Elements of Style

Ecclesiastics - Quote #2: (King James Version) "I returned and saw under the sun,

that the race is not to the swift, nor the battle to the strong, neither yet bread to the wise, nor yet riches to men of understanding, nor yet favor to men of skill; but time and chance happeneth to them all."

Page 13: The Abridged Elements of Style

Omit needless words Rid your writing of clutter:

“in a hasty manner”vs.“hastily”

“Who is…”, “Which was…”“My mother, who is a teacher…”

vs.“My mother, a teacher,”

Page 14: The Abridged Elements of Style

“The fact that…”

“Owing to the fact that” = since

“In spite of the fact that” = although

“Call attention to the fact that” = remind

“The fact that he had not = his failure

succeeded”

“I was unaware of the fact that” = I didn’t know

Page 15: The Abridged Elements of Style

Express coordinate ideas in similar form. When relating two or more ideas,

keep your form consistent. Incorrect: “The French, the Italian,

Spanish, and Portuguese.” Correct: “The French, Italian,

Spanish, and Portuguese.”

Page 16: The Abridged Elements of Style

Incorrect: “It was both a long lecture and very tedious.”

Correct: “It was a long, tedious lecture.”

Correct: “The lecture was both long and tedious.”

Page 17: The Abridged Elements of Style

Keep related words together. Poor word placement can result in

ambiguity.

Page 18: The Abridged Elements of Style

“She noticed a large bloodstain in the rug that was right in the center.”

Page 19: The Abridged Elements of Style

“She noticed a large bloodstain right in the center of the rug.”

Page 20: The Abridged Elements of Style

“A proposal to amend the ballot

proposition, which has been widely criticized...”

Page 21: The Abridged Elements of Style

“A widely criticized proposal to amend the ballot proposition…”

OR “A proposal to amend the widely

criticized ballot proposition…” (Depending on your meaning.)

Page 22: The Abridged Elements of Style

Part II : An Approach to Style

Page 23: The Abridged Elements of Style

Put yourself in the background This is seldom an issue in

technical writing, because of the explicit focus on a specific subject.

Page 24: The Abridged Elements of Style

Write in a way that comes naturally. Use words that come to you

readily. Write using language obvious to

you and your audience. Write first, then edit for clarity.

Page 25: The Abridged Elements of Style

Write with nouns and verbs. Construct your sentences with

nouns and verbs. Next, add those adjectives and

adverbs that add content and flavor.

Page 26: The Abridged Elements of Style

Do not overwrite

Stay on target! Don’t let your subject get away from you.

Illustrating your ideas with examples and metaphors can be helpful, but use moderation.

Again, rewriting is key. Get ideas on paper, then edit.

Page 27: The Abridged Elements of Style

Avoid the use of qualifiers "Rather, very, little pretty -- these are

the leeches that infest the pond of prose, sucking the blood of words. The constant use of the adjective little (except to indicate size) is particularly debilitating; we should all try to do a little better; we should all be very watchful of this rule, for it is a rather important one, and we are pretty sure to violate it now and then."

Page 28: The Abridged Elements of Style

Don’t construct awkward adverbs. Any adjective or participle, with an

“-ly” added, can become an adverb.

Examples: tangledly, tiredly. You should almost never do this!

Page 29: The Abridged Elements of Style

Finally: Be clear Writing is communication. If you must be obscure, be obscure

clearly.


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