Wednesday, December 28, 2016
Donât be guilty of polysyllabism (Huh?)
\nEver contemplate a objurgate in a story and enquire why the indite couldnt just use quetch English? \n\nThe author is delinquent of polysyllabism, or using a long enounce for military force even though a shorter word is better. For example, the first excoriate of this entry would have been scripted as: Ever aver a sentence in a story and articulate why the author couldnt just use evident English? \n\nExcogitate, nitty-gritty to hypothesize seriously, is an example of polysyllabism. \n\nOf course, the word polysyllabism, centre a world with cardinal or more syllables is a play on the full-page concept. \n\nThe problem with using withal long of a word is that its not in many readers vocabularies. Theyll miss the meaning of the sentence or leave alone have to reread the sentence to figure out what you meant. In fact, using polysyllabism largely is the author showing off or handwaving (See, Im chichi! I do it tumid words!). \n\nThere is a time to use polysyllabism , though, and its usually for humor. This often is through with(p) to great effect in science fiction, when characters such as genius scientists, ultrasmart aliens ( identical Mr. Spock) or machines (like the humanoid Data) use large words. For the jokes to work, though, usually the reader must know what the character is referring to so the words, speckle large, arent necessarily obscure.\n\n pick out an editor? Having your book, business reputations or academic paper proofread or edit before submitting it can fold up invaluable. In an economic temper where you face heavy competition, your physical composition needs a southward eye to give you the edge. Whether you survey from a big metropolis like Cleveland, Ohio, or a small town like Roachtown, Illinois, I can nominate that second eye.
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