Garbl's Writing Center
About Me, Gary B. Larson
garbltoo@gmail.com
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[ Home ] [ Writing Resources Home ] [ Style Manual ] [ Plain English Guide ] [ Concise Writing Guide ]
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PLEASE NOTE: I am happily retired in Port Townsend, Washington. I have deactivated Garbl's Writing Resources and am no longer adding, revising, or updating writing resources in this section or any other section.. But please continue to visit and use my free Editorial Style and Usage Manual, Consise Writing Guide and Plain English Writing Guide. I update their content occasionally.
Garbl's Plain Language Resources is an
annotated directory of websites, books, agencies and organizations that can
help you use plain language--or plain English--techniques to improve your
writing.
Online Resources | Print Resources
Plain language, also called plain English, is a technique of
organizing information in ways that make sense to the reader. It uses
straightforward, concrete, familiar words.
Plain language matches the needs of the reader with your needs as
a writer, leading to effective, efficient communication. It is
effective because readers can understand your message. It is
efficient because readers can understand your message the
first time they read it.
The international plain-language movement is an effort of
businesses, organizations, agencies and individuals dedicated to presenting
information so it makes sense to most people.
Plain language is communication designed to meet the needs of the
intended audience, so people can understand information that is important to
their lives.
Also check out these sections of Garbl's Writing Center:
Garbl's Plain English
Writing Guide--A seven-step approach to writing clearly and
concisely to meet the needs of your readers. Covers reader and purpose,
organization, paragraphs, sentences, words, design and testing. This guide also
includes an annotated directory of
plain-English resources -- including government agencies, nonprofit
organizations, and print and web references.
Garbl's Concise
Writing Guide provides simpler alternatives to wordy, verbose,
overstated or pompous words and phrases.
Garbl's
Editorial Style Manual--About concise (adj.),
concisely (adv.), conciseness (n.).
In a variety of empirical studies and in the experience of many companies and agencies, plain language has proved to be better than traditional style in many ways.
Facts and Myths about plain language
Several articles on legislating plain language, making legal
documents readable, writing collective agreements in plain language and writing
in plain language. Not just for lawyers.
Besides guidelines for legal document structure, includes advice
about ambiguity, clear writing, punctuation, capitalization, spelling, cross
references and expressions to avoid.
"We hope you find this document useful and that it helps you
improve your writing - and your agency's writing - so your users can find
what they need, understand what they find and use what they find to meet their
needs."
McAlpine takes plain English techniques another step--to making
documents easy to read and understand worldwide for people who use English as a
foreign language.
"Whether your job is drafting or translating, here are some
hints--not rules--that will help you to write clearly and make sure your
message ends up in your readers' brains, not in their bins."
Ten free guides as PDF files, including How to write in plain
English, A to
Z of alternative words, Plain English guide
to writing letters, Plain English tips
for clear websites and How to write
reports in plain English.
Not just for writing SEC documents, this downloadable PDF file
describes how to free yourself of impediments to effective communications like
stilted jargon and complex constructions.
The organization of ideas, tone, word choice, point of view,
format, and overall ease of reading--those are the issues described in the
useful handbook.
Eight topic sections on introducing plain language, your
reader and your purpose, organizing ideas, using appropriate words, clear and
simple sentences, clear and effective paragraphs,
design and testing.
A summary of the entire PlainTrain program that's easier to
print and view offline.
I use and endorse this downloadable software. Running from
within leading word processors, it searches for complex words, jargon, abstract
words, wordy phrases, hidden verbs, passive verbs, cliches, long sentences and
other writing faults. It then offers advice on editing each sentence. Free demo
download; full version costs US$160.
The Case for Plain Language in Business,
Government, and Law
Alphabetical list of difficult words and phrases, word-wasting
idioms, compound prepositions, formal phrases, and gender-specific words and
phrases--with alternatives.
Back to top.
Creativity | Writing Process | Grammar
| Style and Usage | Reference Sources | Words
| Fat-Free
Writing| Plain Language | Action Writing | Word Play
[ Home ] [ Writing Resources Home ] [ Style Manual ] [ Plain English Guide ] [ Concise Writing Guide ]
[ Writing Bookshelf ] [ What's New ]
I own and recommend the books by Bailey, Cutts, Gowers and Lauchman.
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The
Complete Plain Words, 2002--Ernest Gowers
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Other Print
References, Garbl's Plain English Writing Guide--Gary
B. Larson
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Legal
Writing in Plain English, 2001--Bryan A. Garner
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Oxford
Guide to Plain English, third edition, 2010--Martin Cutts,
co-founder of the Plain English Campaign
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The Plain English Approach to Business Writing,
1997--Edward P. Bailey Jr.
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Plain
English for Lawyers, fifth edition,
2005--Richard C. Wydick
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Plain
English at Work: A Guide to Writing and Speaking,
1996--Edward P. Bailey Jr. (includes The Plain English
Approach to Business Writing)
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Plain
Language and the Document Revolution, second edition,
1999--Carol M. Baldwin
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A
Plain Language Handbook for Legal Writers, second edition,
1999--Christine Mowatt
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Plain
Language Pleadings,1996--Carol Ann Wilson
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Plain Style: Techniques for Simple, Concise, Emphatic Business
Writing, 2008--Richard Lauchman, author of Plain
Language: A Handbook for Writers in the U.S. Federal Government
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For more books on
writing
Back to top.
Creativity | Writing Process | Grammar
| Style and Usage | Reference Sources | Words
| Fat-Free
Writing| Plain Language | Action Writing | Word Play
[ Home ] [ Writing Resources Home ] [ Style Manual ] [ Plain English Guide ] [ Concise Writing Guide ]
[ Writing Bookshelf ] [ What's New ]
Created and maintained by Gary B.
Larson of Port Townsend, Washington, garbltoo@gmail.com.
Updated March 5, 2016.
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