Mixing
academic and colloquial styles is one of the methods for improving
your word choice, given in the chapter Ain't
So / Is Not. This
section stood out, because mixing formal academic terms with everyday
kinds of words is an innovative way to better the quality of a paper.
This method really gives writing a more engaging rhythm. Switching
between styles holds the readers attention by constantly going from
stuffy to chill, then from simplistic to eloquent. Keeping the
readers enamored and creating variety makes the paper more pleasant
to read which is almost always a good thing. “While one effect of
blending language like this is to give your writing more punch,
another is to make a political statement about the way, for example
society overvalues some dialects and devalues others” making a
point your writing itself is an excellent way to convey a message
without having to blatantly state it.
Mixing styles is a good way to spice up your writing or
inadvertently make a point, but it is important to remember that
every paper is directed at a specific audience. So when mixing styles
it is necessary to always keep the target audience in mind. If the
paper is being written towards a more scholarly or scientific minded
group, it would be smart to lean more towards the longer academic
terms. However, if the paper is being written for a magazine or
somewhere else where a lot of younger people or working class
individuals will be reading it. Then going heavy on the colloquial
terms would make the paper less boring, and more appealing to those
groups. “Because there are so many options in writing you should
never feel limited in your choice of words, as if such choices are
set in stone. You can always experiment with your language and
improve it.” There are hundreds of ways to express ideas in the
English language, as a writer one should never feel limited in the
way they can express what they want to say. That being said there are
better ways to express different things to different groups of
people. When using different styles and mixing and matching it is
best to focus on one main audience and write in a way that would be
most effective in communicating your points to them.
1 comment:
Kyle,
On the whole, well done here. I love this: "Keeping the readers enamored and creating variety makes the paper more pleasant to read which is almost always a good thing." :)
This -- "making a point your writing itself is an excellent way to convey a message without having to blatantly state it" -- cannot be overstayed. Writing is nearly always more potent, more powerful, when language and tone illustrate, "show" points rather than explicitly pushing them onto the reader. Good you recognize this. :) But where's your editing?
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