Monday, January 7, 2013

Five Writing Rules You’re Allowed to Break-



I was looking through some blogs I saved and ran across this one written on June 17, 2011 By Erik Deckers, and realized immediately why I saved it to read again and again.  I hope you enjoy it.  Rita

     Chances are, you’re repeating some grammar and writing rules as gospel, not knowing they’re completely wrong. Or that they changed. Or that they were never really rules to begin with.
Whatever the reason, you can stop doing them. In fact, you should stop doing them.
     I’m trying to undo the writing rules my daughter’s 8th grade teacher has been foisting upon her, showing her that they’re not really legitimate, but some arbitrary rule that someone made up to make our language fit a preconceived structure. The English language is an ever-changing organic system that defies most rules. The ones that were created hundreds of years ago — like “don’t end your sentences in a preposition” — was never correct. Other ones like “don’t use incomplete sentences” have changed.

1. You CAN end your sentences with a preposition - This one doesn’t always work, but for a good bit of the time it’s true. The rule was created by a scholar, Robert Lowth, who wanted English to bend to the same rules as Latin. In the Latin sentence structure, it’s not possible to have a sentence end with a preposition. Ergo, said Lowth, English shouldn’t either.
     But it’s wrong. There are times you have to end your sentences in a preposition. For example, let’s say you stepped in something that stinks, and your friend says to you, “In what did you step?”
     Wouldn’t you look at her like she lost her mind?
     In that instance, it’s perfectly okay to say “what did you step in?” It’s proper English, it’s grammatically correct, and it doesn’t sound completely idiotic.
     On the other hand, “where’s it at?” is wrong.
The basic rule is that if you can remove a preposition and the sentence still works, you shouldn’t use the preposition. But if you remove it, and the sentence changes, you should leave the preposition at the end.
     Okay: What did you step in?
     Not Okay: Where is it at?

2. You CAN start a sentence with And, But, or Or - This may have been a real English class rule at one point, but no longer. Common usage has rendered it obsolete. People talk this way. People write this way. It may not be completely accepted in business writing, but I can foresee that hurdle breaking down in the next ten years as more business people speak that way.
Besides, it looks pretty cool. And dramatic. And punchy. And intense.
     And it turns out the practice has been around since the 10th century. It’s just some arbitrary rule our English teachers liked to enforce without ever knowing why.

3. You don’t have to start with the dependent clause first - A dependent clause is that sentence clause that can’t exist on its own. “Before the trial even ended” is a dependent clause (also called a subordinate clause). And we were told that you needed to start sentences with a dependent clause.
     “Before the trial even ended, the real killer had been arrested and the defendant was set free.” not “The real killer had been arrested and the defendant was set free, before the trial even ended.” Even though you might want the important information at the front of the sentence, our teachers told us to put the dependent clause first.
     You don’t have to do that anymore. For one thing, it sounds clunky. For another, there are times where the dependent clause will get in the way. Third, there are times a dependent clause needs to be set apart in a different way.
     “The real killer was arrested — before the trial even ended — and the defendant was freed.”
     It doesn’t always fit at the end, but it doesn’t always have to go first either.
     Your better bet? Eliminate the dependent clause completely, or make it a standalone sentence. Which brings me to my next point.

4. You CAN use incomplete sentences - This was a very minor point of contention while I was writing Branding Yourself Five Writing Rules Youre Allowed to Break (affiliate link). One of my editors would tell me not to use incomplete sentences.
Like this.
     “But it’s a style choice,” I would say. “Not a grammar issue.”
     And while you don’t want to make that a regular habit, stylistically, it doesn’t hurt to do it once in a while. It’s another common usage issue, where enough people have begun doing this that the grammar sticklers have to bow to majority rules and allow the change in the accepted use. (They don’t have to like it, and they’ll talk about it at dinner parties, but they’ll generally leave you alone about it.)
     They also add some punch and drama to your writing, whether it’s fiction or nonfiction. Pepper them occasionally throughout your writing and see what it does for you.

5. A sentence does not always contain a subject, a verb, and an object. A paragraph does not always contain 3 – 5 sentences. - Journalists violate this rule all the time.
     Because it’s a dumb rule. And untrue.
      For one thing, people read differently than they did 30 years ago. We’re so impatient that we don’t want to read a lot of text. We need white space to break up the monotony of the Tolstoy-esque blocks of text we find in some books, tech manuals, and magazines. If you’ve ever looked at a page with a lot of tiny text and no breaks at all, you know what I’m talking about.
      Newspaper publishers learned a long time ago that people won’t read long paragraphs and über-long sentences. So they encouraged writers to use short punchy words, short sentences, and short paragraphs.
     Even one sentence paragraphs.
     My daughter has been told her paragraphs all need to be 3 – 5 sentences long, and I keep telling her it’s not only unnecessary, but it leads to bad writing. If you try to fill up every paragraph with 3 – 5 sentences, you start writing filler just to get there.
     But if you keep some extra white space in your writing — by using short paragraphs — people are more likely to continue reading long beyond when they thought they would quit.
     How about you? What writing rules do you gladly (or unwittingly) violate? Are there rules you wish you could break? 

4 comments:

  1. I LOVE that you've shared this. When a writer has a voice (and/or gives one to their characters), they're going to break the rules. Not everyone is perfect in their grammar, and making them so takes away the opportunity to let the reader fall in love with (or hate) them for who they are. I love reading books with thoughts and dialog that sound and feel real. We have to break the rules at times in order for the fiction to seem like reality. :) The flow is ebbed when everything is made "perfect"!

    Jessica

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. So true, Jessica. Love your last sentence! Thanks for your comment. Rita

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  2. I love how you said this, Jessica. You are so right. Thanks, Rita

    ReplyDelete

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