Monday, October 9, 2006

Pain And Numbness Between Shoulder Blades

Three links speaking of the proper use of spelling reform

The comments the author of the blog " coat Radio "Has left us three very good links to articles about spelling in blogs, one here, the post is entertaining and educational talks about the most common misspellings in the blogosphere:

Orthographic Most Common
Horrors Everyone has their own style of writing and their own way of understanding their texts, however, can often give way to misinterpretation or reading difficult if we wrote a very complicated, convoluted or ... sucker. The difficulty that we readers not only affected by a complicated style, also spelling or grammatical errors that may go unnoticed at the time of writing and affect the meaning of the sentence (not the same "fret smell" that "smells fret), especially when it comes to the dreaded diacritics are those used to distinguish two words that are spelled the same but mean different things (only = only, single = one person). Then put the most common mistakes I've found (and apparently very "innocent") so you can have a reference guide before posting your writing.

diacritics: When words sound alike but not identical. There

vs Ay! vs

I think there is for errors more common, since the three words sound alike. There
: indicates a direction, a place.

* Here is the output.
* The right way is there.

Visit: the verb BE is therefore written with axes and means that something exists.

* In this case there are three toys.
* There are still chances to win the game.

Alas: it is an exclamation, it means that you use it when something surprising happens.

* Oh, my children!
* Oh! You gave me a blow from a ball. Compare

:

* See you there!
* Ay what a pain!
* There is still much to be done. You vs Tu



You: refers to your partner (second person). Is a pronoun, so it will always be used when you want to tell someone.

Read the full article at design Alchemists ....

The other two articles are equally interesting:
The defect in the written verbiage
The method of inverse pyramid (same author of the comment)

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