Plain English - How: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Amwelladmin (talk | contribs) |
Amwelladmin (talk | contribs) |
||
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
====Organise your writing.==== | ====Organise your writing.==== | ||
====Edit your writing.==== | ====Edit your writing.==== | ||
It is ''hard'' to write clearly. You have to work at it | It is ''hard'' to write clearly. You have to work at it. Editing is harder work than writing. It takes three times as long. So write two thirds fewer sentences. But make them ''good'' ones. Take pride in your work. Be elegant. | ||
====Be self-critical.==== | |||
We are lawyers: elegant writing doesn't come naturally to us. We had it trained out of us. The cultural weight of our education, training and professional development conditioned us to write in a certain way. | |||
To stop writing that way, we must be very self-critical. | |||
====Keep sentences short.==== | ====Keep sentences short.==== |
Revision as of 17:19, 23 April 2016
General Principles
The fewer words the better.
Organise your writing.
Edit your writing.
It is hard to write clearly. You have to work at it. Editing is harder work than writing. It takes three times as long. So write two thirds fewer sentences. But make them good ones. Take pride in your work. Be elegant.
Be self-critical.
We are lawyers: elegant writing doesn't come naturally to us. We had it trained out of us. The cultural weight of our education, training and professional development conditioned us to write in a certain way. To stop writing that way, we must be very self-critical.
Keep sentences short.
Keep subject, verb and object together
Prefer the active voice
Be personal.
Keep it positive
- Prefer positives to negatives.
- Avoid double negatives.
- Recoil in horror from triple negatives.
Definitions
Enumerations
- Break into subparagraphs:
- Branch right, not left:
Singular versus plural
Provisos
Bad habits
Shall
And/or
For the avoidance of doubt
Including, without limitation
The Counterparty may, but shall not be obliged to
Numbering
Style
- Use strong verbs, instead of modified weaker ones. Prefer "bellowed" to "Shouted loudly".
- Avoid wimpy writing: Avoid "almost", "seems to".