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February Sentence structure Goofs

Tuesday, August 7, 2018

February Sentence structure Goofs

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This month is about affection. How would you make insurance promoting pieces that your prospects will love? With you-situated, accommodating substance that is free of syntactic mistakes. Beneath, you'll locate some profitable direction on two exceptionally normal written work botches.

Oversight #1: i.e versus e.g.

One of our most loved dialect lovers, Language Young lady (a.k.a. Mignon Fogarty, writer of a few composition manuals, including "Syntax Young lady's Down to business Tips for Better Written work"), says the abuse of these two condensings is one of the best five mix-ups she saw in her past life as a specialized manager.

"There's so much disarray that in a portion of the drafts I got once more from customers they had really crossed out the correct shortened form and supplanted it with the wrong one," she composes on her blog.

Both are contractions for Latin terms (i.e. remains for "id est"; e.g. is another way to say "exempli gratia"), and good fortunes recollecting that. Deciphered, "id est" signifies "that is" and "exempli gratia" signifies "for instance."

Language structure Young lady offers this trap: "Starting now and into the foreseeable future, i.e., which begins with I, signifies 'as it were,' and e.g., which begins with e, signifies 'for instance.' I = at the end of the day. E= case."

Slip-up #2: Which versus that.

"That" is prohibitive and basic to pass on the importance of a sentence. "Which" is non-prohibitive and frequently presents a trivial condition. Think about the accompanying case from Overall Words (worldwidewords.org).

The house that is painted pink has quite recently been sold.

The house, which is painted pink, has quite recently been sold.

"The statement 'that is painted pink' is a prohibitive proviso, since it constrains the extent of the word 'house,' demonstrating that the author doesn't mean any house, just the one that has been painted in that specific shading," composes Overall Words' Michael Quinion. "In the second illustration the provision is non-prohibitive: the essayist is giving extra data about a house he's portraying. The author is stating 'incidentally, the house is painted pink,' as an extra piece of data that is not basic to the importance and could be taken out."

Stay tuned for more Language Goofs in Spring. In the event that you haven't yet bought in to the Insurance Advertisers' Blog, do as such currently by entering your email in the upper right corner of this screen.
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