Revising Prose: Efficiency, Accuracy, and Good Feelings
Excess Language
As you already know, plain Language is language that isn’t overly affected
or ornate but simple. Below are some guidelines for reviving slow, dull,
confusing, inactive sentences:
1. Use Active Voice
2. Limit Prepositional
Phrases
3. Get to the Point
4. Limit to be Verb Forms
5. Avoid
Nominalizations
Although I would love to spend the entire semester just looking at
sentences, time will not permit it. However, I do encourage those of
you who wish to improve your communication further to check out Richard
Lanham’s Revising Prose or a host of other style books that
discuss more than grammar for revising one’s writing.
Style Books for Further Reading
In the arbitrary order of reader commitment necessary—least to greatest:
- Strunk, William Jr. and E.B. White. The Elements of Style. New
York: MacMillan (various editions).
- Richardson, Peter. Style: A Pragmatic Approach. 2nd ed. New York: Longman. 2002.
- Zinsser, William. On Writing Well. New York: Harper (various
editions).
- Williams, Joseph M. Style: Ten Lessons in Clarity and Grace. New
York: Longman (various editions).
- Corbett,
Edward P. J. and Robert J. Connors. Style and Statement.
New York: Oxford UP. 1999.
- Kolln, Martha. Rhetorical Grammar: Grammatical Choices, Rhetorical
Effects. New York: Allyn and Bacon (various editions).
Note: The above books assume that you, the writer,
have some sophistication in Standard Edited American English. These are not
handbooks like the late Diana Hacker’s guide A Writer’s Reference that discuss
some style issues but are predominantly grammar/spelling/usage rulebooks.
Additionally, employing the
strategies from the above books doesn't exactly mean "better writing." You
can't think of writing or effective communication as something that happens
in a vacuum; you must consider context, audience, and purpose. There is no
secret code to writing. Although we have rules, they are meaningless if
one's communication is irrelevant.
Assuming We Still
Have Time…
Here are a few sentences to get us going. If it helps
you, copy and paste the sentences in MS Word.
1. “I have reason to believe that there is a
continuing presence of terrorists in this country.”
Revision:
2. “It is my belief that criminal charges were brought
up based upon affidavits that were delivered to the Attorney General’s
Office by the law enforcement agency that was charged to apprehend possible
suspects.” –former US Attorney General John Ashcroft
Let’s see that again:
It is my belief
that criminal charges were brought up
based upon affidavits
that were delivered to the Attorney General’s Office
by the law enforcement agency
that was charged to apprehend
possible suspects.
3. “You are being tasked / the responsibility for the
creation of documents / needed to successfully allow our clients / to
accurately obtain detailed queries / from the Datawarehouse / after the
successful completion of a training session.”
What a piece of work!
Prepositional phrases:
for the
creation
of documents
from the
Datawarehouse
after the
successful completion
of a training
session
Possible verbs:
create
needed
allow
obtain
query
complete
Remember, sentences in the real world usually come
in context with other sentences. These guidelines are no exception for
common sense or audience-specific requirements. Contextual factors will
govern your writing decisions more than any rules (no matter how good the
rules may be).
Homework
Look at these sentences for homework and come in next class with revisions,
questions, and smiles. They ought to scare you at first, but examining them will
also encourage you not to “dress up” your words unnecessarily.
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