Creating short sentences makes writing clearer, easier to understand and offers greater accessibility. Eliminate complex sentence structure, verbiage, jargon, redundancy and digression whenever possible. Try to keep sentences under 20 words. You can do this by:
Communicate with your language and impress with your ideas-not the other way around. Do not use a big word when a shorter, simpler one will convey the same meaning.
Put the purpose of the message or the main idea to be communicated first and then arrange the details so that they follow logically from one to the next. Put information that is not critical to your message at the end or in a sidebar, where the reader can choose to read it later.
Change passive sentences into active ones to energize your writing. For example, change:
The mouse was eaten by the catTOThe cat ate the mouse.
Eliminating linking verbs can also make your writing livelier. For example, change:
The car that is blueTOThe blue carORThe story is an example ofTOThe story exemplifies
Instead of saying, "Negative structures make your writing harder to read" SAY "Positive structures make your writing easier to read." Double negatives are especially difficult to figure out such as "Not using negative structures makes your writing easier to read." Even single negatives can be difficult because readers must figure out what the positive would be before negating it.
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