Jan, I hope you don’t mind my jumping in.
The issue you are addressing is called “elegant variation.” It is one of the mysteries of pseudo-experts’ advice as to how this phenomenon came to be considered a good thing. As this (trustworthy, believe it or not) Wikipedia article explains, “elegant variation” was originally a term of derision—and still ought to be.
I taught legal writing for 10 years, and you will note that elegant variation is ESPECIALLY to be avoided in legal writing, among several types of writing. Nonetheless, it is a bane to ALL writing.
Be a Better Writer--SO MANY WRITING TIPS
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Re: Be a Better Writer--SO MANY WRITING TIPS
Steve
nlf.net
________
"When the Round Table is broken every man must follow Galahad or Mordred; middle
things are gone." C.S. Lewis
“The chief purpose of life … is to increase according to our capacity our knowledge of God by all the means we have, and to be moved by it to praise and thanks. To do as we say in the Gloria in Excelsis ... We praise you, we call you holy, we worship you, we proclaim your glory, we thank you for the greatness of your splendor.” J.R.R. Tolkien
nlf.net
________
"When the Round Table is broken every man must follow Galahad or Mordred; middle
things are gone." C.S. Lewis
“The chief purpose of life … is to increase according to our capacity our knowledge of God by all the means we have, and to be moved by it to praise and thanks. To do as we say in the Gloria in Excelsis ... We praise you, we call you holy, we worship you, we proclaim your glory, we thank you for the greatness of your splendor.” J.R.R. Tolkien
Re: Be a Better Writer--SO MANY WRITING TIPS
Of course I don't mind!
I'd never heard the phrase "elegant variation," but it's a familiar concept. It shows up in the writings of high school students who have discovered the 'thesaurus' feature of their word processor. Only it gets a bit ridiculous with them, because they'll just choose words at random, without awareness of those words' connotation. I've read some pretty bizarre sentences due to that thesaurus button.
I'd never heard the phrase "elegant variation," but it's a familiar concept. It shows up in the writings of high school students who have discovered the 'thesaurus' feature of their word processor. Only it gets a bit ridiculous with them, because they'll just choose words at random, without awareness of those words' connotation. I've read some pretty bizarre sentences due to that thesaurus button.
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Re: Be a Better Writer--SO MANY WRITING TIPS
Jan, this little tip comes from my own experience. Sorry that I went over the count by one word.
Inspiration is impatient. When it comes be ready with paper and pen, or it moves on.
I've been known to jot down a thought I didn't want to forget while driving in traffic. Not
recommended, though.
Lillian
Inspiration is impatient. When it comes be ready with paper and pen, or it moves on.
I've been known to jot down a thought I didn't want to forget while driving in traffic. Not
recommended, though.
Lillian
When Youth Fades
Available at: https://www.amazon.com/s?k=when+youth+f ... nb_sb_noss/
Fortunate 500
I have a love affair with words. I write, even when I think I can't. I'm hooked on words!
"Let words bewitch you. Scrutinze them, mull them, savor them, and in combination, until you see their subtle differences and the ways they tint each other." Francis Flaherty
Available at: https://www.amazon.com/s?k=when+youth+f ... nb_sb_noss/
Fortunate 500
I have a love affair with words. I write, even when I think I can't. I'm hooked on words!
"Let words bewitch you. Scrutinze them, mull them, savor them, and in combination, until you see their subtle differences and the ways they tint each other." Francis Flaherty
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Re: Be a Better Writer--SO MANY WRITING TIPS
Ooh, a wonderful thread! One for the bookmarks. Or the "various tidbits written on post-it notes and stuck like a fleet of butterflies all around my house"
"You can always fix bad. You can't fix blank."
Ok. I know my grammar, but I'm mentally thrashed from work. I can has example? I tried Google, but didn't get anywhere...glorybee wrote:• Strike ‘to be’ verbs from sentences to force active verb use that transforms your work. (FaithWriter Sydney Avey)
In the same vein, Gracelikerain (sorry, I don't know your real name!) posted on a thread of mine and passed on a quote she heard:glorybee wrote:• Write, write, write. You can edit later. (FaithWriter Helen Paynter)
"You can always fix bad. You can't fix blank."
I don't understand this one. (Thinking fiction writing here.) Does it mean in prose? Or in dialogue as well? That would seem odd. It seems like exclamation points can be one way to show (vs. tell) the speaker's attitude, tone, etc. *waits anxiously for input*glorybee wrote:• Cut out all exclamation points. An exclamation point is like laughing at your own joke. (F. Scott Fitzgerald)
Re: Be a Better Writer--SO MANY WRITING TIPS
Here's a list of "to be" verbs in English: am, are, is, was, were, be, being, been
Often, sentences with "to be" verbs can have a greater punch if re-written.
Jan was eating a brownie.
Jan snarfed down a brownie.
The writers were going to a conference.
The writers flew to a conference.
I am walking toward the doctor's office with dread.
I trudge toward the doctor's office.
As for the exclamation points--when I edit, I delete 95% of the ones I encounter. In non-fiction and in narratives, they are almost never necessary; they mark one's writing as overly youthful. In dialogue, they're acceptable, but they should not be over-used--they should be reserved for moments of extreme emotion.
As writers, we should want our words (or our characters' words) to indicate emotion, not our punctuation.
Often, sentences with "to be" verbs can have a greater punch if re-written.
Jan was eating a brownie.
Jan snarfed down a brownie.
The writers were going to a conference.
The writers flew to a conference.
I am walking toward the doctor's office with dread.
I trudge toward the doctor's office.
As for the exclamation points--when I edit, I delete 95% of the ones I encounter. In non-fiction and in narratives, they are almost never necessary; they mark one's writing as overly youthful. In dialogue, they're acceptable, but they should not be over-used--they should be reserved for moments of extreme emotion.
As writers, we should want our words (or our characters' words) to indicate emotion, not our punctuation.
Jan Ackerson -- Follow me, friend me, give me a wave!
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Twitter: @janackerson1
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