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Post by account_disabled on Dec 8, 2023 22:43:05 GMT -5
Colloquialisms Spoken language is different from written language. Many argue that bloggers should adopt colloquial language, but I don't totally agree. I can't read posts in which the blogger addresses readers as if she were actually speaking to them orally. Let's leave colloquialisms to the spoken language and defend the beauty of the written one. Language in blogging should be natural and clear, not colloquial. Okay, okay, etc. : a series of variations to express “okay”. It's not difficult to know how that sentence should be written. We are always faced with abbreviations. “Bene” is truncated to be' (therefore it has an apostrophe and not an accent), or, in the case of an interjection, it transforms into “beh”. Come on : I agree that in speaking we tend to group words together, but in written language we Phone Number Data write "and come on". And, please, no accents on the verb dare . #3 – Punctuation marks They indicate pauses, short or long, or gaps between sentences. They cannot be inserted at will or in arbitrary quantities. Yet online you can see artistic combinations born from the inspiration of the moment. Three dots of suspension : they are precisely three and not two, four, five and so on and so forth. And the space should not be placed before the dots, it should instead be placed after, as in any other punctuation mark . Exclamation and question marks : they are used respectively for exclamations and questions (hence the names) and must be written one at a time, not in pairs, triads, pokers and fives.
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