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Stoddard, Sally – 1978
Stylistics, the art of making effective choices in writing, depends on synonymy. This means that writers, depending on the purpose, the audience, and the context of their messages, will rephrase those messages to improve their effectiveness. Paraphrasing messages to fit the needs of particular situations depends on a number of stylistic variables…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Language Styles, Language Usage, Rhetoric
Conway, William D. – Technical Writing Teacher, 1981
Offers examples of appropriate and improper use of the passive voice in technical communications and gives suggestions for using these examples in technical writing classrooms. (RL)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Language Styles, Negative Attitudes, Sentence Structure
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Williams, Joseph M. – College English, 1979
The clearest writing style is one in which the grammatical structures of a sentence most redundantly support the perceived semantic structure; a textured style is one in which the syntactic complexity invests a sentence with distinctive force. (DD)
Descriptors: Difficulty Level, Grammar, Higher Education, Language Styles
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Harris, Jeanette – Journal of Teaching Writing, 1985
By focusing their attention closely on a written text, cloze passages help students learn more about how language works--the interaction of vocabulary and syntax, the influence of diction on style, the important grammatical relationships between words in a sentence, and the logical relationships between sentences in a paragraph. (HOD)
Descriptors: Cloze Procedure, Context Clues, Higher Education, Language Processing
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Leahy, Richard – College Teaching, 1995
This article provides college teachers with specific suggestions for improving students' writing styles and techniques. Elements of readability, sentence structure and combination, and overall construction are outlined and stylistic strategies are explained with numerous examples. (MSE)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, College Instruction, Higher Education, Language Styles
Horodowich, Peggy Maki – 1979
Since clauses are the largest functional components of a sentence, their analysis can increase attention to sentence structure and stylistic variation. Students can learn to distinguish main clause types by naming the verb forms used (transitive, intransitive, equational, and passive). Once students have mastered the recognition of main clauses,…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Higher Education, Language Styles, Secondary Education
Campbell, B. G. – 1980
Coherence and cohesion are fundamental considerations of the composing process that help to define the global and local components of texuality. Global text coherence centers on those aspects of the familiar rhetorical situation. Coherence operates at the paragraph and essay levels, answering questions about focus, tone, mode, topic, and thesis.…
Descriptors: Cohesion (Written Composition), Connected Discourse, Discourse Analysis, Higher Education
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Poole, Millicent; Field, T. W. – Language and Speech, 1976
Indicates that, in relation to oral systems, written systems are more complex in structure, reveal more adjectival but less adverbial elaboration, show more complex verbal structures, and contain fewer indices of personal reference. (RL)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Difficulty Level, Higher Education, Language Styles
Enos, Theresa – 1985
Seven people who both write and read various kinds of reports in their professions were asked to read and respond to identical sets of student reports over a four-month period in order to determine whether they responded to personae. Attached to each unevaluated and unidentified student report was a form with 15 different response areas that…
Descriptors: Adults, Coherence, Cohesion (Written Composition), Educational Change
Piper, Henry Dan – 1977
From colonial days onward, colloquial speech was looked down on as inappropriate for serious writing, but with the publication of "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn," American colloquial style was raised to the level of high art. English teachers should encourage students to build on their own colloquial speech in their writing, rather…
Descriptors: Black History, Black Literature, Elementary Secondary Education, English Instruction