Post by account_disabled on Dec 27, 2023 5:38:41 GMT
There are writing errors that are made unconsciously, or perhaps deliberately - and this is worse. These are habits and tendencies of some authors and bloggers that make writing unprofessional. I have identified 4, because they are the ones I most often find in blogs and books. Indeed, the first 2 errors are those of bloggers, while the last 2 are noted in some books. Index of topics Write everything in lower case Titles with capital letters Period, this stranger Excess ellipsis write everything in lower case Several times I have seen bloggers who do not use capital letters : neither for proper names nor at the beginning of the sentence after the period.
Is it perhaps considered a style? Part of the blogger's personality? Style certainly cannot go against grammar, just as the blogger's personality does not manifest itself with an "alternative grammar". Today, especially due to political Special Data correctness and inclusive language (which I will return to shortly), the Italian language is mistreated a lot. Capital letters have a precise function, or rather more than one: They indicate a personal name (but also names of nations, institutions, etc.): they are words that therefore have a certain importance in the sentence. They indicate, after the period, the beginning of a new sentence: if you don't capitalize, the reader could be disoriented if he doesn't notice the period.
Here's the real problem: disorienting the reader. The reader cannot understand where one sentence ends and another begins. Writing Article Titles with Initials in Capital Letters She's an American. It is the Americans - or perhaps all English-speaking peoples, given that Problogger, an Australian, also has this tendency - who have this habit, and the Italians immediately copy them. Capital letters are not very legible in themselves, but a title with all initials in capital letters is even less so. I really struggle to read titles like that. The use of capital letters , in the Italian language, is allowed only in some cases (such as those mentioned above). Normal nouns, verbs, conjunctions, articles, adjectives and prepositions do not need to be capitalized.
Is it perhaps considered a style? Part of the blogger's personality? Style certainly cannot go against grammar, just as the blogger's personality does not manifest itself with an "alternative grammar". Today, especially due to political Special Data correctness and inclusive language (which I will return to shortly), the Italian language is mistreated a lot. Capital letters have a precise function, or rather more than one: They indicate a personal name (but also names of nations, institutions, etc.): they are words that therefore have a certain importance in the sentence. They indicate, after the period, the beginning of a new sentence: if you don't capitalize, the reader could be disoriented if he doesn't notice the period.
Here's the real problem: disorienting the reader. The reader cannot understand where one sentence ends and another begins. Writing Article Titles with Initials in Capital Letters She's an American. It is the Americans - or perhaps all English-speaking peoples, given that Problogger, an Australian, also has this tendency - who have this habit, and the Italians immediately copy them. Capital letters are not very legible in themselves, but a title with all initials in capital letters is even less so. I really struggle to read titles like that. The use of capital letters , in the Italian language, is allowed only in some cases (such as those mentioned above). Normal nouns, verbs, conjunctions, articles, adjectives and prepositions do not need to be capitalized.