Archive News - Global news
home contact

Writing
Writing

News Article Archive
Articles Archive
Archive News

Top Articles


Increase Your Web Traffic By Using Keyword Articles

If you have an online home based business you know...
Read More

Writing With Power: 5 Snappy Rules For Success

Almost everyone could profit from enhancing their writing skills. From...
Read More

Dont Rely on Your Spellchecker - or - The Importance of Good Proof Reading

Weather posting a page to your Website, writing a letter...
Read More

Voice in Narrative and Dialogue - A Contrast of Writing Styles

One of the nice things about being an author is...
Read More

Sell More Books With a Powerful Back Cover

Did you know that your back cover information is, after...
Read More

Call Yourself a Writer? Where Are Your Notes?

Writers are notorious collectors of slips of paper. They tear...
Read More

If The Viewpoint Character Is A Secondary Character, Have You Established Who He is?

Creative Writing Tips ?I have said above that if a...
Read More

Keeping a Love Journal

Do you love someone very deeply? A spouse, son, daughter,...
Read More

7 Weapons to Conquer the Giant Procrastination Keeping You from Your Book Dream

Have you been guilty of procrastinating on your book project,...
Read More

Formats for Writing Life Narratives

Q and A.Best choice when subject is very verbal or...
Read More

Comma Usage Made Simple

Don't they drive you nuts?You can visit all the rules...
Read More

8 Tips to Get Publishers to Notice You

If your articles aren't getting published very often, or you...
Read More

The Best Freelance Job Boards for Writers

How many times have you checked out a job board...
Read More

Create A Dream Diary

How many times have you forced yourself to sit in...
Read More

10 Secrets For Everyday Writing Success

During my 25-year career in a variety of professional positions...
Read More

Writing For Free: When & When Not to Do It!

Right off the bat, I want to say that there...
Read More

Writers can Grow to be Comfortable with Criticism

On my first newspaper assignment as a critic, I was...
Read More

Writing the 8 WebCopy Headline Categories

My article this issue is an excerpt from a book...
Read More

5 Ways to Break the Story Spell

You sink back into your favourite chair with a new...
Read More

8 Advantages to Writing a Book as an Entrepreneur

As an aspiring or an established entrepreneur, you are an...
Read More

Which Comes First - Short Story Or Novel?

A writer writes. Bet you've heard that one...
Read More

Your Words Will Determine Your Business!

Be careful when you write.Words you use, sentences you phrase...
Read More

The Self-indulgent Writier

A writer can never be self indulgent whether writing fiction,...
Read More

Seven Suggestions To Develop a Superb Writing Style

Every writer eventually develops her own unique style of writing....
Read More

Write a Letter, Make a Difference

Today I took the dog for a walk and realized...
Read More

Articles

Home > Writing  > Get Published: The Nuts and Bolts of English, and How to Impress a Publisher (2) 

Josh Schwartz writing 'X-Men' sequel: OMFG or WTF? - Entertainment Weekly

Variety

Josh Schwartz writing 'X-Men' sequel: OMFG or WTF?
Entertainment Weekly - 18 hours ago
And that's why I'm more than a little perturbed by the news that Josh Schwartz (exec producer of GG, as well as The OC and Chuck) will be writing (and ...
‘X-Men’ Heads Back To Boyhood New York Times
Josh Schwartz Writing X-Men: First Class Empire Movies
‘Gossip Girl’ Writer Still Scripting ‘X-Men: First Class’; Not ... Geeks of Doom
E! Online - First Showingall 67 news articles

Get Published: The Nuts and Bolts of English, and How to Impress a Publisher (2)

The tiniest things can be so useful when you come to consider the nuts and bolts of writing. The comma is one of them. No, don't go away: it's a useful device that's often used badly -- or ignored altogether.

As an editor of books, I am forever sticking commas into other people's prose, having first of all had to work out what their sentence is trying to say. Many people are slapdash about comma use, and it can go down badly with a commissioning editor who is, say, looking at your approach letter and sample chapter and thinking, "Uh, oh. This one's going to give us problems. Where's that equally promising but better-presented proposal that will cost us far less in copy-editing fees?"

There are many useful punctuation and grammar tips in a downloadable book I co-wrote on how you can get yourself published very quickly, You Can Write Books (at www.youcanwritebooks.com), although its main focus is on how to get your work before a publisher. But here I'll deal with this one useful but sometimes overlooked little squiggle, and a few things that many writers neglect.

First, should be used in a list of items to break them up: pens, pencils, books, and paper. Should you use a comma before and in that list, though? Well, yes if you're, say, a North American; yes and no if you're British. This is called the list comma or serial comma (it is often called the Oxford comma, and is still used by Oxford University Press).

Many people say it's not necessary, because the word and in that sentence is doing the job the commas were doing earlier in the sentence. However, many writers of English throughout the world -- notably, as I said, in America -- like the serial comma, and insist on it. Most British writers, publishers, and newspapers don't bother with it, and so would write "writers, publishers and newspapers"; "pens, pencils, books and paper."

What should you do? Well, you choose a style and stick to it. Be consistent. Better still, you see which style your potential publisher uses, and go with that. That goes for all stylistic considerations. Don't forget: you're selling an idea to a publishing house, and anything you can do to impress them will go in your favor.

The comma is also very handy to separate two distinct clauses in a sentence, and this is where many writers ignore it. You'll see how I used it in the last sentence, after the word sentence. Not only does it give you a pause for breath (a mental breath if you're not reading aloud, of course), but often it can help the meaning.

Take this: "I passed the ball to Joe and Fred kicked it into the net." I passed the ball to Joe and Fred? No, I passed it to Joe, and then Fred came along and kicked it into the net. You get the meaning eventually, but why should I as writer give you, the reader, pause? If I'd written, "I passed the ball to Joe, and Fred kicked it into the net," you wouldn't even have blinked, because the meaning would have been immediately clear.

Or look at this sentence: "That day I went to the movies ..." could mean that on that particular day I went to the movies ("That day, I went to the movies") or that it was on the day I went to the movies that something else happened ("That day I went to the movies something else happened").

In the first pair of parentheses above, you'll see how the comma has been used to convey the first of the two possible meanings. But, if you miss it out, you're going to have your reader thinking you meant it the other way. If that's not your intention, make sure you use the comma.

A few final brief points, then, about the comma.

Commas come before quoted speech: "Joe said, 'Let's go and see a movie.'"

Commas come after a piece of quoted speech, before you say who's speaking: "'Let's go and see a movie,' said Joe."

Commas can be used in the way brackets are used: "My English teacher, Martha Moonbeam, gave me good marks this week." The commas here are known as bracketing commas, because they do the same work as parentheses (round brackets, like these) but in a "weaker" way.

Another example of bracketing commas would be, "The train, which was late leaving, made up for lost time." Don't miss off the second comma; many people do.

Commas separate adjectives in such sentences as, "It was a cold, damp, dreary sort of day." In this context, they're doing much the same work as in the list of items above, except that here we have adjectives, not nouns.

In one short article, you have, I hope, got to grips with this bit of occasionally troublesome but very useful punctuation. You may have been familiar with some of the things, anyway, but I hope that, if there were one or two concerns you weren't too sure about, this article has been of help.

Andrew John is co-author of You Can Write Books, a no-nonsense downloadable book from http://www.youcanwritebooks.com that will get you into print if you follow its advice. He and his co-author, Stephen Blake, have written more than a dozen print titles (details on http://www.youcanwritebooks.com). Both are writers and editors, and You Can Write Books is crammed with advice you can trust.

Showing 1 - 0 of Articles
« Previous
Next »
MBA Writing Tips (BusinessWeek Online via Yahoo! News)
MBAs may be good at analyzing spreadsheets and reading financial statements, but many cringe when faced with a lengthy academic writing assignment. The task can be especially difficult for students who have been in the work force for four or five years and haven't written a serious academic paper or report since college. Indian teenager thrown under train for writing a love letter to a girl from a different caste (Daily Mail)
An Indian teenager was kidnapped, beaten and paraded through the streets before being thrown under the wheels of a speeding train - for writing a love letter to a girl. Indian boy thrown under train for writing love letter to upper caste (Canada.com)
A teenage Indian boy was thrashed, paraded through the streets with his head shaved and then thrown under a train and killed for writing a love letter to a girl from a different caste, Indian police said on Thursday. Bloomfield schools benefit from writing project (The Farmington Daily Times)
SAN JUAN COUNTY Entering its third full year of existence, the Bisti Writing Project continues to improve writing skills in San Juan County schools. Indian boy thrown under train for writing love letter (Reuters via Yahoo! News)
A teenage Indian boy was thrashed, paraded through the streets with his head shaved and then thrown under a train for daring to write a love letter to a girl from a different caste, police said Thursday. Miley Writing Songs with her Boyfriend (Teen Hollywood)
Miley Cyrus is making music with her new boyfriend Justin Gaston - the pair has been writing songs together, according to the star's dad Billy Ray. Writing dangerously - Arts and Entertainment (The Weber State University Signpost)
November is the month of family, Thanksgiving, shopping, Christmas music, and … novel writing? That's right, November is known as National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo). Writing, art contest focuses on King's dream (Gaffney Ledger)
The annual Martin Luther King Jr. celebration will be held Monday, Jan. 19, 2009, in Fullerton Auditorium at Limestone College with Grammyaward winning pianist Daryl Davis as guest speaker and musician. Today marks the beginning of a writing and arts competition offered to all Cherokee County pubic school students. Writing with Light (The Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles)
MoPA is proud to present the youth exhibition entitled Writing with Light, on view from September 13 to February 1, 2009. The exhibition will illustrate the connection between photography and literacy. Lakeview High School students take on novel writing project (Columbus Telegram)
Kim Zach told her students that what they would be writing wasnt going to be all good. (1 comment)
Global news archive