Download >>> https://tinurli.com/283r9i
The article has not yet been created. The article has not yet been created. This is a sentence. This is a sentence too. Sentences are easy to read, it's nice how they don't take up much space on the page, and they're quick to write because you just use lots of commas and periods instead of semicolons and colons like in English composition class. Sentences basically own words and phrases in writing, so you should use them a lot. Sentences are the building blocks of paragraphs. Without sentences there can be no paragraphs. Without paragraphs there can be no books, and let's face it, who really wants to read a book without sentences? But without semicolons and colons too? Forget it! The whole thing would just be one big run-on sentence that would go on forever and ever until you got bored and stopped reading or died of old age. The only way to get people interested in something is to break it up into little pieces and organize those pieces into bigger groups of pieces called chapters and then put them all together in a nice package called a book. So paragraphs are sentences, and sentences are paragraphs. If you can't put a paragraph inside another paragraph and call it a chapter, then you probably don't really need to write a book—just stick with writing articles and e-mails and cute little stories for your kids. But if you do write a book, make sure to use lots of sentences in it (and semicolons and colons). The next most important thing in writing is deciding what you're going to write about. I know, I know—it seems so easy, so natural. But it's not! There are actually a lot of things you can write about. Some people spend their whole lives writing about things they don't even believe in just so they can make a buck or two or maybe get famous. If you're going to do this, then at least become an expert on your topic before you start writing about it. Read as much as possible from the writers who have already covered that area, and then after you think you know everything about it, go out and do as much as you possibly can to confirm what you've read is correct and accurate and complete. Make sure you understand all your sources of information completely before you start writing about it. If you do that, then when someone who doesn't know as much as you read what you wrote, they'll actually learn something from what you wrote instead of just being dazzled by your magnificent prose and skillful use of semicolons and colons. I mean really—who cares whether a semicolon is used properly or not if no one learns anything from reading the article? When the next one comes along, they'll probably just use a colon instead. Now that we've gotten those things out of the way, let's talk about how to write a book. cfa1e77820
Commentaires