YES YOU SHOULD WRITE A BOOK AND FOLLOW YOUR DREAM TELL YOUR PARENTS OR FRIENDS TO EDIT IT TO HELP YOU WHEN YOU R DONE
2006-12-31 12:46:35
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answer #1
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answered by Cindy 3
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(Suggestions below, after the corrections.)
You should have written:
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I love writing stories! It's fun to be able to pick what happens to someone. I get so excited when I get new ideas that my heart jumps. ["So" doesn't mean "very". Compare "He is very tall." to "He is so tall that he has to buy his shirts in a special shop." Both are correct. "He is so tall." is not. “He is sooo tall” sounds like a schoolgirl gushing.] I write my stories in little notebooks but I'm not very good on punctuation or big words. My words don't really express what I want the reader to feel. I wish I could write as well as authors do in books, but I just can't. I already have five stories written. I think they're good ideas but I can't express them. Does anyone know what I should do?
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Ask your teacher to look at your stories and just underline errors, instead of correcting them. Then look the words up in a dictionary and see if you can figure out what you did wrong. Sometimes words sound alike but don't mean the same thing. Their, there and they're are an example.
Read a lot. Good usage and grammar will rub off.
You don’t have to use big words. Ernest Hemingway didn't, and he won the Nobel Prize for literature. Use the words you know.
Show the reader what your characters are, don’t tell them:
“Out of the way, stupid dog” muttered John, kicking a small puppy.
“That wasn’t very nice” said Bill.
“Sez you!” John shouted, swinging a left hook at Bill.
“Whoops”. Bill ducked, knocked John out, waited for him to come to, helped him up and dusted him off. “Consideration is one of the hallmarks of a gentleman’, he told John. Bill could use some awfully big words for someone who finished second in the shot put at the last tri-county track meet.
2006-12-31 13:11:06
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Channel your excitment, get the big picture of the story first... the little notebooks are excelent... editors are there for punctuation... read the dictionary in your spare time, note down iteresting ones and you will find places to use them...
I read once a quote that said "You need to have lived before you can write, to have suffered a little," cant remember the rest...
Another quote was about a good author knows what is in her charactors pantry... I am not a storey writer, I think it takes alot of outward observation and im too internal. Channel your focus on other people, learn from their lives... observe ... maybe in a few years your ideas will ripen into storys...
2006-12-31 13:23:58
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Hi Taylor,
I love writing stories too and have a similar problem, but on top of not being able to get my main ideas through i usually "flatline" after only a few pages and don't know how to write what happens next. first of all, how old are you? because if you are still going to school then you should try to pay extra attention in english class. otherwise just keep practicing writing and let someone who knows a lot about grammer proofread your work. you probably don't want to hear this because you might have heard it by a lot of people but, "practice makes perfect". it's not just a phrase to give people false hope or anything like that. practice really does work. as for "writers block" i find it is helpfull to plan a full outline for your stories in great detail so you know exactly what is going to happen and when.
2006-12-31 13:05:32
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answer #4
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answered by Erik C 2
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I've had the same problem a few years ago. But I have gotten a little better. Get some books on wrighting and read alot. A thesaurus is a really good tool to have to help you with words.
Also you don't have to worry about puncuation and spelling on your first few drafts. Thats the wonderful thing about writing. You don't have to worry about it for a while. Just enjoy it.
2006-12-31 12:48:44
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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2016-04-15 06:28:55
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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2016-06-03 20:55:31
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Use a dictionary and thesarus so that u can look up and learn new words. Get help if u have trouble expressing yourself. When it comes to punctuation, type your stories in Word and do spell check.
2006-12-31 12:46:48
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answer #8
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answered by jesusfreak_200513 2
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Beleive in yourself, stick to your own style of writing, don''t try to copy someone else's style.When trying to express what the characters feel, think of a time when you were in that situation yourself or if you haven't been in that situation, think how you would feel. As for puntuation, the dictionary and thesaurus can be a useful tool.
2006-12-31 13:05:59
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answer #9
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answered by rainbow 2
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I am guessing that you are still quite young. It takes many years and lots of practice to truly master the language; you just need to give it time and keep trying. Apart from that, you could get into a creative writing course to help yourself to become a better writer.
2006-12-31 12:48:02
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answer #10
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answered by Ape Ape Man 4
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Expose yourself to books which have larger vocabularies and start reading them. Look up the words that you don't know and begin learning their definitions.
Trust me, this works.
I was reading college level material in junior high because I was such a book worm. :0)
This will increase your own knowlede and vocabulary, and thus, you'll be able to articulate better in your writing.
2006-12-31 17:35:02
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answer #11
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answered by Anonymous
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