February was officially recognized as Black History Month by the US government in 1976 as part of the US bicentennial, although its beginnings date to the establishment of Negro History Week in 1926. It’s a month to remember important events and people in African-American history. We’ve selected five inspiring authors to read during Black History Month as a remembrance of the great contributions of African-Americans who achieved literary acclaim.
Thursday, 28 March 2002
Tuesday, 26 March 2002
How long did you study grammar in school?
This poll is part of a series that Grammarly is running aimed at better understanding how the public feels about writing, language learning, and grammar.
Please take the poll and share your thoughts in the comments. We can’t wait to hear from you!
If you are interested in more, check out last week’s poll.
Wednesday, 20 March 2002
Sequence of Tenses–Grammar Rules
The rules governing verb tenses are dictated by logic; an action in the future obviously cannot happen before an action in the past. In writing, it’s a matter of looking at your clauses and sentences and determining when each action is happening relative to everything else. The past must come before the present, and the present before the future, etc. Pay particular attention to the verb sequence when you have a dependent clause before an independent clause, or a result clause before the if-clause.
Sunday, 17 March 2002
Job Seekers: What’s Wrong with Your Resume? Probably More than You Think.
#WhatIWrite: Cover Letters and Resumes
More than two thirds of salaried jobs require a significant amount of writing, making written communication a key consideration in hiring. Yet, top organizations still spend more than $3 Billion (with a “B”!) per year on remedial training to improve employees’ writing to baseline standards.
Cover letters and resumes are, not surprisingly, a great way for potential employers to assess candidate’s writing skills.
Tuesday, 5 March 2002
I Before E Except After C: 9 Helpful Spelling Rules
Learning spelling conventions can help you write with confidence. Which of the following rules are new to you?
S or ies?
To make a noun plural, you usually add S. However, you might have noticed that some words that end in Y deviate from the norm. For example, babies is the plural form of baby. How do you know when to change Y to ies? Look at the letter before the Y to find out.
Monday, 4 March 2002
How Language Represents Color
Every language represents colors with different words. Linguists have found some interesting patterns in how colors are represented in language. Let’s look at some of their most intriguing findings.
Predictable Sets of Colors
All languages distinguish colors. However, some languages represent colors in only two basic groups. Linguists found that all languages that have only two color distinctions base them on black (or dark) and white (or light).
Wednesday, 27 February 2002
How to Ask for Days Off (And Actually Get Them)
There’s a good possibility that you need a day (or two, or more) off work. NPR, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, and the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health conducted a poll and found that about half of Americans who work fifty-plus hours a week don’t take all or most of the vacation they’ve earned. Of those who do take time off, about 30 percent say they do a significant amount of work during what’s supposed to be their hard-earned leisure time.
Tuesday, 19 February 2002
A Grammar Lesson: Direct and Indirect Objects
An object is the part of a sentence that gives meaning to the subject’s action of the verb. For example: Alice caught the baseball. Subject=Alice Verb=caught Object=baseball
A direct object answers the question of who(m) or what. In the sentence above, you could determine that ‘baseball’ is a direct object by asking the question: What did Alice catch? She caught the baseball.
Thursday, 14 February 2002
Thru vs. Through—Which Is Right?
- Through can be a preposition, an adjective, and an adverb.
- Through is the only formally accepted spelling of the word.
- Thru is an alternate spelling that should be used only in informal writing or when referring to drive-throughs.
As if all the confusion over the words through and threw wasn’t enough, modern English has piled on yet another homophone: thru.
Through vs.
Friday, 8 February 2002
5 Pieces of Fiction to Inspire Productivity
With 2017 beginning in earnest and resolutions being made, you may be looking for a way to make your leisure time a little more productive and guilt-free. To that end, there are some excellent pieces of fiction that provide more than just entertainment; they also inspire productivity. These are just a few titles that can motivate and energize you as you set new objectives for the year ahead.
Thursday, 31 January 2002
7 Things You Write Every Day That You Probably Forgot About
In some ways, everyone is a writer. Have you thought about how much writing you do in one day? Don’t overlook these seven daily writing tasks!
Emails
According to Lifewire.com, people around the world send more than two billion emails per day. That’s 2.4 million emails every second! The format of some emails closely resembles that of physical letters. For example, business emails contain the salutation, body, and closing that you would find in a business letter.
Monday, 28 January 2002
Are Pun Competitions a Real Thing?
Around 400 people gathered on Sunday, November 6, at a Kuala Lumpur coffee shop called The Bee. Inside, there was barely enough room to stand, but that didn’t stop people from having fun and enjoying what they’d all come to witness—Malaysia’s very first pun competition. Adequately titled Pun Competition Malaysia, the event was a massive success, and by the end of it, Malaysia had its first winner of “The Punniest Ever” title, a guy called Zim Ahmadi.
Monday, 21 January 2002
Essential History and Guide for Modern Acronym Use (Part 1 of 2)
Guest post from Scott Yates
As founder of a blogging service for business operators too busy to write their own posts, I pay a lot of attention to “good” writing.
We have a wide variety of clients, and our challenges involve the mastery of industry jargon, including acronyms and abbreviations.
So, if a client asks for a piece on search engine optimization or customer resource management — acronymically SEO and CRM — should the blogger just jump in and use the abbreviation, or should we genuflect at the altar of convention and have each abbreviation undergo the initiation of being spelled out at least once?
Wednesday, 16 January 2002
This Week in Writing, 8/29-9/4
Happy Friday! Once again it’s time for our weekly roundup of stories about writing, books, and authors. Have something you’d like to see us cover here? Let us know in the comment section!
Our Favorite Stories:
1 Tips for Aspiring Writers in 12 Infographics (Ebook Friendly)
2 Writing Tips from a Supreme Court Justice (Time)
3 J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter Trivia Tweets (Salon)
Monday, 31 December 2001
Dreamed or Dreamt
Is there a difference between dreamed and dreamt? You might be surprised to find conflicting reports. Some people say that there is no difference. Others say that the two words have different meanings. What’s the real deal?
Dreamt and dreamed are both past tense forms of dream. Dreamt is more common in Britain, while dreamed is more common in other English-speaking countries, including the U.S.
Friday, 28 December 2001
What Does Bff Mean?
- Bff is an initialism of the phrase best friends forever.
- Bff has evolved into a noun that refers to a close friend.
Being someone’s bff does not mean you’re part of a club with only two members. It does, however, mean that you have a very close friend.
The Meaning of Bff
Bff is an initialism of the phrase best friend(s) forever, and it’s a term of endearment used for selected close friends.
Wednesday, 19 December 2001
Nine Tips for Writing the Perfectly Professional Sales SMS
By Sophorn Chhay
Just because you have room for 160 characters in your texts doesn’t mean you should use them all.
In fact, texting experts seem to agree that an ideal text should be short and sweet, especially in a business environment, where the name of the game is brevity. Essentially, focus on quality, not quantity.
This can sometimes be a challenge for people who enjoy being verbose.
Tuesday, 18 December 2001
Essential History and Guide for Modern Acronym Use (Part 2 of 2)
Guest post from Scott Yates
Abbreviations and acronyms have embedded themselves in English as somewhat of an auxiliary language. If you thought Latin was a dead language, it isn’t. It lives somewhat zombie-like in some very common abbreviations like, e.g., i.e., etc.
(Notice how the “etc.” in that last sentence did double-duty there? No extra charge for that. 😉
(Same goes for the double-duty parenthesis at the end of the last parenthetical winky-face.)
Thursday, 13 December 2001
5 Things Admissions Officers Look For in an Application Essay
By David at EssaysCoach.com
Within your college application, your personal statement is your one opportunity for the admissions officer to “meet you”, to visualize the person behind the numbers. While no essay can save an unqualified application, an outstanding essay can push an otherwise mediocre application into the “yes” pile.
However, writing a good application essay is hard.
50 Awesome Holiday Words to Know This December
The holidays are upon us, and these winter celebrations with their many traditions each have a rich and varied vocabulary. ...
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The holidays are upon us, and these winter celebrations with their many traditions each have a rich and varied vocabulary. ...
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Any writer who’s spent time in the trenches publishing articles online knows it’s hard to keep a reader’s attention. In fac...
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Are you feeling frustrated and unproductive? Like you’re constantly busy but the things that really matter aren’t getting d...