Garbl's Writing Center
About Me,
Gary B. Larson
garbltoo@gmail.com
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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 Style and Usage Links is an annotated
directory of websites with tips to help you improve your writing, reduce
writing errors, increase consistency and figure out the mysteries of
abbreviations and capitalization. It also includes a list of online style manuals and a section on
Avoiding Bias.
Garbl's Editorial Style
Manual--This alphabetical style guide can help answer your writing
questions about abbreviations, capitalization, grammar, numbers, organization
terminology, punctuation, spelling and word usage. Other organization Style Manuals and Guides are listed
in an annotated directory below.
Participants discuss how particular words, phrases and syntactic
forms are used; how they originated; and where in the English-speaking world
they're prevalent.
Answers frequently asked questions about the newsgroup and
comments on recommended language books, pronunciation, usage disputes,
punctuation, word and phrase origins, spelling and other topics.
An alphabetical listing of words
and phrases that are frequently misspelled, used incorrectly and confused with
other words or phrases.
Articles on language-use issues and practical editorial advice in
the Copyediting blog. Newsletter also available.
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The Elements of
Style, 1918 edition--William Strunk Jr., published on
line by the Bartleby Project, Columbia University, New York, N.Y. |
The
classic original text covering rules of usage, principles of composition, a few
matters of form, words and expressions commonly misused and words commonly
misspelled.
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Grammar Slammer--Online
version of a commercial product by English Plus+ of Shelton,
Connecticut. |
Grammar and writing rules and tips using the familiar Windows
Help file format.
An excellent miscellany of grammatical rules and explanations,
comments on style and suggestions on usage. Lynch's book, The English
Language: A User's Guide, is a revised and expanded version of this
online guide.
Definitions and examples of more than 60 traditional rhetorical
devices, all of which can be useful to improve the effectiveness, clarity and
enjoyment of your writing.
Regularly updated columns on style and usage from the
bimonthly Columbia Journalism Review.
Article covers seven of the most common problems: weak verbs,
overnominalization (noun stacks), redundant phrasing, expletives (there is, it
is), passive voice, subject-verb mismatch and sentence length.
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Revising
Prose--Center for Communication Practices, Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute, Troy, New York. |
Eighteen clear suggestions with examples of faulty usage and
better usage.
This presentation is designed to teach students about common
sentence clarity problems, including misplaced modifiers, dangling modifiers,
and passive voice, as well as strategies for combining sentences together.
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Sharp Points--Bill Walsh,
copy desk chief on the business desk at the Washington Post and author
of Lapsing
Into a Comma: A Curmudgeon's Guide to the Many Things That Can Go Wrong in
Print--and How to Avoid Them. |
"I
guess you could call these rants. I'm not actually foaming at the mouth,
but if you watched me on the job you'd probably see me slap my forehead and
gaze skyward each time I run into these all-too-common writing
problems."
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Technical Writing--Ronald B.
Standler, Ph.D., Concord, New Hampshire, attorney and former professor of
electrical engineering |
Style manual for technical writing in physics and electrical
engineering.
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Thirty
Tools for Writers--Roy Peter Clark, senior scholar at The Poynter
Institute and director of the National Writers' Workshop. |
A list of tools for working with sentences and paragraphs,
language, effects and structure.
Comments and tips on editing, headline writing, cliches and bad
writing from journalism professors and newspaper editors.
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Writer's
Web--Writing Center, English Department, University of Richmond,
Virginia. |
A handbook that includes advice ranging from sentence structure
and punctuation to editing for clarity and style.
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Based on the Chicago Manual of Style and
Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, this alphabetical guide
(PDF) is an outline of style rules basic to AAA's journal
editing.
Take a site tour of this
Web-based edition of "The Journalist's Bible," a searchable
version of the latest AP Stylebook. You (or your organization) can
customize entries and examples to meet your interests and concerns. An annual
individual subscription costs $20; annual site licenses vary based on size of
organization.
An
online column of frequently asked questions posed in emails about the
Chicago Manual of Style: The Essential Guide for Writers, Editors, and
Publishers.
This style guide is offered to bring consistency to correspondence and print and electronic publications written for and about Western Michigan University. It addresses many of the more commonly asked questions about style and several of the more common errors.
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Corporate Style
Guidelines--Scriptorium Publishing Services Inc., a technical
writing, editing, training, and consulting firm in North Carolina. |
A suggested internal style guide in two sections: mechanics and
usage (such as when to capitalize and when to use bold type) and frequently
misused words.
This reference document helps communicators adopt a style that is
consistent and appropriate for university use, especially when they write for
an external audience.
Based on the expanded hardback version, this free online guide
gives general advice on writing, points out common errors and cliches, and
offers guidance on consistent use of punctuation, abbreviations and capital
letters.
The comprehensive guide of rules, reminders and handy references
covers spelling, punctuation, numbers, abbreviations, correspondence and other
topics. A handbook for authors and translators in the European Commission
Based originally on the Associated Press Stylebook, this
alphabetical style guide provides advice for abbreviations, capitalization,
grammar, internet terminology, numbers, organization terminology, punctuation,
spelling and word usage.
A Guide for Legal Writing in Plain English (PDF)
Searchable and presented in both
HTML ASCII and PDF files, this manual provides comprehensive information on
form and style for printing and binding, and the material and the style of type
used.
Based mostly on the Associated Press Stylebook, this alphabetical
list of guidelines aims to achieve a clear, consistent, contemporary style of
writing in non-academic documents and publications.
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Writing Style
Guide--Office of University Publications, Florida Institute of
Technology, Melbourne |
Alphabetical listing of preferred styles to standardize writing,
based on The Associated Press Stylebook and other dictionary
resources.
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It begins with two rules for writing about people with
disabilities: Avoid cliches and cliched constructions. And use
"value-neutral" terms and constructions.
Lists words that have strong negative connotations and words that
are more affirmative and reflect a more positive attitude.
Excellent advice--not just for the legal profession--on writing
techniques and guidelines that include both structural solutions and generic
solutions.
Discusses "the generic he/man problem."
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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 by Gary B.
Larson of Port Townsend, Washington, garbltoo@gmail.com.
Updated March 5, 2016.
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