Post by account_disabled on Dec 27, 2023 1:39:21 GMT -6
Can you write better ? Better than what we usually write? There has been a lot of talk about writing rules - perhaps too much - and in the end, we all know, every writer and blogger follows their own rules when they write. I have therefore listed some unwritten "rules", which are not real rules, but only approaches to writing that allow the writer to produce better texts. Beyond ideas: having something to say An idea for me is little more than nothing, otherwise I wouldn't have a list of over 300 titles for articles that I would have liked to publish here on the blog and another with around fifty titles for stories that I will never write. An idea is a spur of the moment , which can find an outlet and turn into an article or a story, or it can die out because it doesn't have enough energy to develop.
We must not only have ideas, but have something to say, otherwise we write articles and stories that are not worth reading. When I had something to say, I wrote articles and stories. In other cases everything was shipwrecked in the sea of nothingness. Use direct language (and be yourself) Today we live in the hypocritical era of political correctness. Of inclusive language . Of the struggles against linguistic sexism . And the result is a depersonalization of writing - and of the Italian language, continually attacked by Special Data mispronunciations and anglicisms - and also of the very people who write. Writing with direct language does not mean being aggressive or offensive, but only writing in a decisive way, underlining one's personality and style, distinguishing oneself from the mass of charlatans who would like us all to be the same, reveling in our non-uniqueness.
Using direct language also means making yourself understood and avoiding unnecessary - and perhaps dangerous - misunderstandings. Bureaucratic language is the opposite of direct language, and in fact it is incomprehensible. Don't write for the reader (or almost) I have always found it strange, and useless, to point out that we must first understand who our readers are and then, based on this analysis, create stories and content for them. But who are our readers? Every time I created a blog, wrote an article or a story, I never thought about the final readers , because the final readers are understood, included, in the underlying theme and topic of my blogs, my articles and of my stories.
We must not only have ideas, but have something to say, otherwise we write articles and stories that are not worth reading. When I had something to say, I wrote articles and stories. In other cases everything was shipwrecked in the sea of nothingness. Use direct language (and be yourself) Today we live in the hypocritical era of political correctness. Of inclusive language . Of the struggles against linguistic sexism . And the result is a depersonalization of writing - and of the Italian language, continually attacked by Special Data mispronunciations and anglicisms - and also of the very people who write. Writing with direct language does not mean being aggressive or offensive, but only writing in a decisive way, underlining one's personality and style, distinguishing oneself from the mass of charlatans who would like us all to be the same, reveling in our non-uniqueness.
Using direct language also means making yourself understood and avoiding unnecessary - and perhaps dangerous - misunderstandings. Bureaucratic language is the opposite of direct language, and in fact it is incomprehensible. Don't write for the reader (or almost) I have always found it strange, and useless, to point out that we must first understand who our readers are and then, based on this analysis, create stories and content for them. But who are our readers? Every time I created a blog, wrote an article or a story, I never thought about the final readers , because the final readers are understood, included, in the underlying theme and topic of my blogs, my articles and of my stories.