Grammar Rules For the Unenlightened;
or, How to Write Gooder
- Don't use no double negatives
- Don't never use no triple negatives.
- No sentence fragments
Corollary: Complete sentences: important.
- Stamp out and eliminate redundancy.
- Avoid cliches like the plague.
- All generalizations are bad.
Corollary: All statements must be specific.
- Never listen to advice.
- Take care that your verb and subject is in agreement.
- A preposition is a bad thing to end a sentence with.
- Avoid those run-on sentences that just go on, and on, and on, they
never stop, they just keep rambling, and you really wish the person
would just shut up, but no, they just keep going, they're worse than
the Energizer Bunny, they babble incessantly, and these sentences, they
just never stop, they go on forever...if you get my drift...
- Never contradict yourself always.
- You should never use the second person.
- The passive voice should never be used.
- When dangling, watch your participles.
- Never go off on tangents, which are lines that intersect a curve at
only one point and were discovered by Euclid, who lived in the sixth
century, which was an era dominated by the Goths, who lived in what we
now know as Poland...
- As Ralph Waldo Emerson once said, "I hate quotations."
- Excessive use of exclamation points can be disastrous!!!!!!!!
- Remember to end each sentence with a period
- Don't use commas, which aren't necessary.
- Don't use question marks inappropriately?
- Don't be terse.
- Don't obfuscate your theses with extraneous verbiage.
- Never use that totally cool, radically groovy out-of-date lingo-type slang.
- Avoid tumbling off the cliff of triteness into the black abyss of
overused metaphors.
- Keep your ear to the grindstone, your nose to the ground, take the
bull by the horns of a dilemma, and stop mixing your metaphors.
- Avoid those abysmally horrible, outrageously repellent exaggerations.
- Avoid any awful anachronistic aggravating antediluvian alliterations.
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