Grif.Net

01/17/13 Grif.Net – Can you believe MORE Rules of Grammar?

01/17/13 Grif.Net – Can you believe MORE Rules of Grammar?

In modern writing, for good reasons, under normal circumstances, whenever
you can, use prepositional phrases in limited numbers and with great
caution.

Avoid going out on tangents unrelated to your subject — not the subject of
a sentence — that’s another story (like the stories written by Ernest
Hemingway, who by the way wrote the great fisherman story The Old Man and
the Sea).

Unless you’re a righteous dude don’t try to be too kewl with gnarly slang to
which you’re not hip.

And if you must use slang, avoid out-of-date slang. Right on!

You’ll look poorly if you misuse adverbs.

Use the ellipsis ( . . . ) to indicate missing . . .

Between good grammar and bad grammar, good grammar is the best.

There are so many great grammar rules that I can’t decide between them.

In English, unlike German, the verb early in the sentence, not later, should
be placed.

Note: People just can’t stomach too much use of the colon.

~~
Dr Bob Griffin
[email protected] www.grif.net
“Jesus Knows Me, This I Love!”