Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byMartina Harris Modified over 8 years ago
1
1 Write With Style and Grace Grammar & Style Dos and Don’ts J. Kulbel Business Information Technology Edmonds Community College
2
2 What Will We Cover? Style Don’ts Style Dos Rules Have Changed Style Suggestions Email Guidelines
3
3 Style Don’ts In accordance with your request as to my intentions with regard to attendance at the November 21 grand opening, as made in your recent invitation, I would like to extend my most sincere appreciation of your invitation, but must regretfully decline as I am otherwise engaged on the evening of your grand opening.
4
4 Style Don’ts... Leave out “that” if the sentence is clear without it. At this point in time owing to the fact that it is necessary to be in closer to the airport, I would like to recommend that we should make exploration of new sites.
5
5 Style Don’ts... Avoid there – it weakens the beginning of the sentence. There are three reasons why I deserve a raise. Vs. I deserve a raise for three reasons.
6
6 Style Don’ts... Avoid using parentheses. Avoid underlining or use it judicially. Avoid gender specific language. Use gender neutral words.
7
7 Style Don’ts... Don’t write to impress—it will fall flat Don’t rely on the spell or grammar checker. Don’t use a preposition at the end of the sentence if it is a useless word. Where’s the store at?
8
8 Style Don’ts Don’t use the first name and a comma in a letter’s greeting. Don’t use his/her too much. It is awkward. A teacher who does not have the respect of his or her students should resign, and he or she should look for another line of work.
9
9 Style Don’ts Don’t use their to replace he or she unless the subject is plural. Don’t misplace modifiers. My boss returned to the hospital where she underwent surgery in 2001 in a local fire company’s ambulance.
10
10 Style Don’ts Don’t use passive voice unless writing negative messages. John wrote the memo. NOT The memo was written by John.
11
11 Style Dos Remember FANBOYS = for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so Two independent clauses set apart by a FANBOY gets a comma.
12
12 Style Dos Semi-colons separate two independent clauses. Semi-colons are used stylistic to show a direct connection between ideas.
13
13 Style Dos A sentence with four pieces of punctuation flags a run-on sentence. Use verbs more than nouns. Commas are used after new idea transitions – although, therefore
14
14 Rules Have Changed We can now end a sentence with a preposition. These are the children I will be taking care of. Less awkward than... These are the children of whom I will care.
15
15 Rules cont... Sentences may begin with because. Use a colon after “Dear” in a business letter. This is now business standard. Block style formatting is standard in today’s business.
16
16 Style Suggestions Use this simple rule for whom/who: If you can substitute a “him” use whom. If you can substitute a “he” use who. Who [he] is going to be famous? Who [he] is responsible? He is going with whom [him].
17
17 Suggestions cont... Numbers under 10 are written out. Be aware of parallel form. Balance short and long sentences. If you opened directly, end softer. If you opened softer, end strongly.
18
18 Suggestions cont... Use bullets for lists under six. Use numbers in any list where the items should be prioritized. Formatting in business writing is as important as the word choices.
19
19 Suggestions cont... Paragraphs should be four-five lines long with transitions. Sentences should be about seven to eight words long. Use 11-12 size font for business writing.
20
20 Suggestions cont... Use the word “you” more than “I” or “we.” Remember the writer is the reader’s servant. As you write be sure to ask who, what, why, when, where and how.
21
21 Email Guidelines Messages should be brief and succinct. Limit the message to 25 lines or less. The entire message should fit on the screen. Use file attachments for longer documents.
22
22 Emails cont... When sending a file attachment, give a brief description of the document. Use bullets or numbered lists. Salutations and closings are omitted to keep length short.
23
23 Emails cont... Use standard capitalization rules. All caps is considered shouting. Emails are not private. If the message is confidential, set up a meeting.
24
24 Use a Style Guide! Use a style guide!
25
25 Did I say use a style guide? Yes – I thought I did! Now, go out and write right!
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.