by Andrea
Writing is terse and to the point. Maintain sentences as short and direct as probable. Eliminate any irrelevant information and any replications. Don’t use three examples when one will be adequate. Say what you want to say in the most direct way possible, rather than trying to astonish with bigger words or more complex sentences. Diverge long sentences with short pithy sentences. Use fragments rather than full sentences when phrases are possible, and start sentences with verbs; eradicate pronouns (“I”, “he” or “she”). Fluctuate words: Don’t repeat a “dominance” verb or adjective in the same article. Use commas to elucidate meaning and make reading easier. Remain reliable in writing postscript such as use of abbreviations and capitalizations.