Post by Cultures You on Oct 21, 2023 6:52:10 GMT
Repetitions – the Italian language does not like repetitions. At a glance, when revising a text, in the same paragraph look for the repeated word and modify it with synonyms (did I mention that the dictionary of synonyms and antonyms cannot be missing from your library?); Quotes – they are beautiful, they make us show off our culture, they say directly what we think, they are easy to find thanks to Google and the millions of pages of quotes, but if they are in everyone's ears they become cloying: therefore, yes to quotes, sparingly, but which are original.
Let dear Blaise Pascal rest in peace and 'the heart has reasons for him that reason does not know'; Incipit – remember that you are capturing the reader's attention, so don't reveal what you want to say in the first line, otherwise photo editor you could very well write a one-line post; Dialect phrases – quoting a Milanese or Venetian saying will make you or those who love your language smile, but for everyone else it will evoke nothing, except the annoyance of feeling excluded; because the dialect in the written language is just a wink to your countrymen, all the others will not understand or if they understand they will not laugh.
Aoid it, but if you want an audience limited to 'your peers', go ahead. Punctuation – if you think commas and periods should be distributed like icing sugar on your post, you need a little brush up on punctuation. Take your child's grammar and study why and how periods should be highlighted by punctuation marks. And the suspension dots precisely these, well, avoid them as much as possible (I'm not saying eliminate them because they are sometimes useful in posts) but don't overdo it, at the third or fourth sentence left hanging by the dots (there are , remember, not more) your reader will feel the irrepressible desire to click elsewhere.
Let dear Blaise Pascal rest in peace and 'the heart has reasons for him that reason does not know'; Incipit – remember that you are capturing the reader's attention, so don't reveal what you want to say in the first line, otherwise photo editor you could very well write a one-line post; Dialect phrases – quoting a Milanese or Venetian saying will make you or those who love your language smile, but for everyone else it will evoke nothing, except the annoyance of feeling excluded; because the dialect in the written language is just a wink to your countrymen, all the others will not understand or if they understand they will not laugh.
Aoid it, but if you want an audience limited to 'your peers', go ahead. Punctuation – if you think commas and periods should be distributed like icing sugar on your post, you need a little brush up on punctuation. Take your child's grammar and study why and how periods should be highlighted by punctuation marks. And the suspension dots precisely these, well, avoid them as much as possible (I'm not saying eliminate them because they are sometimes useful in posts) but don't overdo it, at the third or fourth sentence left hanging by the dots (there are , remember, not more) your reader will feel the irrepressible desire to click elsewhere.