10 Quick Tips to Improve Your Writing by Richard Nordquist
By TRWCBlogger
Whether we’re composing a blog or a business letter, an email or an essay, our usual goal is to respond clearly and directly to the needs and interests of our readers. These 10 tips should help us sharpen our writing whenever we set out to inform or persuade.
Vary the length of your sentences.
In general, use short sentences to emphasize ideas. Use longer sentences to explain, define, or illustrate ideas.
See Sentence Variety.
Put key words and ideas at the beginning or end of a sentence.
Don’t bury the main point in the middle of a long sentence. To emphasize keywords, place them at the beginning or (better yet) at the end.
See Emphasis.
Use specific nouns and verbs.
To convey your message clearly and keep your readers engaged, use concrete and specific words that show what you mean.
See Detail and Specificity.
Read aloud when you revise.
When revising, you may hear problems (of tone, emphasis, word choice, and syntax) that you can’t see. So listen up!
See The Advantages of Reading Aloud.
Actively edit and proofread.
It’s easy to overlook errors when merely looking over your work. So be on the lookout for common trouble spots when studying your final draft.
See Revision Checklist and Editing Checklist.
We’ll close with a cautionary note borrowed from George Orwell’s Rules for Writers: “Break any of these rules sooner than say anything outright barbarous.”