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got hit by these peeps LOL not really jus found this gif on another site.
TopShelf TG Fiction in the BigCloset!
got hit by these peeps LOL not really jus found this gif on another site.
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Comments
Nice
To quote Austin Powers
" Oh, I hope there's a search involved."
LOL
Jessica Marie
Luv it
It deserves its own place on the site.
Has anyone thought about setting up a listing of proofreaders and editors as a reference?
Huggles,
Winnie
Huggles,
Winnie
Very Cute
It has loads of possibilities.
May Your Light Forever Shine
May Your Light Forever Shine
We're all grammar police...
...or rather, every one of us has a little grammar cop inside our heads that makes us wince when we see certain words jammed together in particular sequences that violate the "laws" we've internalised.
It's automatic, just as our ears resolve (absent structural damage) music into tones and chords, based on deep structures within our brains.
Just as music may, and usually does, contain moments of dissonance and consonance, stories may involve "bad" grammar and be perfectly "correct," as long as the parts that make us wince, or feel tension, are "released" back into consonance.
The musician's skill lies in knowing when to build tension, and when to resolve it, and the author's skill lies in knowing how words sound when strung together. There are no "bad" notes, nor are there "bad" words, just places in a piece of music or a story where particular notes or words don't belong.
For most of us who are not savants, whether in music or in writing, we have to learn and practice to internalise the situations wherein and whereby these rules can be exploited to particular effect.
Teachers can help. Studying the works of masters often helps, in both areas of creativity.
I highly commend Flowers for Algernon, a short story (later adapted into a novel) by Daniel Keyes to your attention. In it, the author uses language, grammar, and diction to make a very telling point about the central character, Charlie Gordon, whose one excursion into the science lab will bring tears to your eyes.
Puddin'
-----------
Q: How do you get to Carnegie Hall?
A: Practice, practice, practice.
-
Cheers,
Puddin'
A tender heart is an asset to an editor: it helps us be ruthless in a tactful way.
--- The Chicago Manual of Style
Teachers, God Bless 'em
For most of us who are not savants, whether in music or in writing, we have to learn and practice to internalize the situations wherein and whereby these rules can be exploited to particular effect.
Teachers can help.
So true! Even before I was totally corrupted by learning how to write for newspapers, my teachers despaired of impressing those rules on me. Thankfully for them, after my senior year of high school I was no longer required to take any English courses, having passed the state-required proficiency exam when I started college. I think the standards were very low that year. ;-)
m
They know they can survive
All right...move along...the show's over...
THATTHATISISTHATTHATISNOTISNOT
"She was born for all the wrong reasons but grew up for all the right ones." Che Dio ti benedica! 'drea
Love, Andrea Lena
Lockdown
I was just about to make a comment, but my brain put my mouth, or I should say fingers, on lockdown.
Nancy Cole
"You may be what you resolve to be."
T.J. Jackson
Smiley Cop
Need to put that badge in the hand of a smiley face with a patrol person's cap on.
;)
I Guess...
...I should thank you, inasmuch as I've used "Greetings from the Grammar Police" as a subject header on a few private messages.
But I don't think I'm quite cheeky enough to use it...
Eric