Fortran

Guide To Learn

Enhance Your Prose with Literary Devices

Literary devices are techniques that writers have developed to take language beyond its literal meaning and appeal to the senses. Although you’re more likely to encounter literary devices in fictional works and poetry, you can use them in other types of writing to drive home a point, clarify an idea, or punch up your prose. The […]

Some Different Styles

Every type of writing or genre has a certain style. Here are brief descriptions of some common writing genres and their styles: News articles. These are written in an objective, presentational style by journalists. The writer tries to be invisible. As they say, this is a “just the facts” type of writing. Column. This form of journalism […]

Practice

Practice Each of the following sentences contains errors or poor choices in grammar, usage, or mechanics. Rewrite each sentence to fix anything that doesn’t seem right. If you can’t spot or correct the error, don’t beat yourself up. Instead, use this practice session to figure out where you need the most help. The answers that […]

Use Parallel Constructions

Parallel construction results when two or more related phrases are in the same grammatical form; for example, they’re all nouns, they’re all verbs, or they’re all gerunds (verbs ending in –ing that act as nouns). When items aren’t parallel, a sentence sounds awkward, as in the following example: The company rewarded its employees for their hard work, expertise, and paying attention […]

Beware of Misplaced and Omitted Commas

The comma is one of the most diminutive of punctuation marks, but an omitted or misplaced comma can cause considerable confusion. Here’s an example of how a comma can completely change the meaning of a sentence: Let’s bake, Grandma! Let’s bake Grandma! A missing serial comma (the comma before the last item in a series) can also […]

Avoid Dangling Modifiers

A dangling modifier is a word or phrase that’s in the wrong place. As a result, the misplaced modifier unintentionally describes the wrong word, as in the following example: Having read the book, the movie disappointed me. In this example, “having read the book” describes “the movie,” which doesn’t make sense. By placing the modifier before the […]

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