Working With Words: Which Word Is Right?: Adopted By: Marwa AL-Halabi
Working With Words: Which Word Is Right?: Adopted By: Marwa AL-Halabi
Word Is Right?
Adopted by: Marwa AL-Halabi
Learning Objectives
4. Angle of vision:
• Identify how different wording can change angles of vision and impact on readers.
• Apply techniques to demonstrate different angles of vision and create objective writing.
• Recognize patterns and identify key words to differentiate between main and supporting ideas
These words may sound alike when spoken, but they carry entirely
different usages and meanings.
Recognizing Commonly Confused Words
6.Look over corrected papers for misspelled words. Add these words to your
list and practice writing each word four to five times.
7.Test yourself with flash cards. Sometimes the old-fashioned methods are
best, and for spelling, this tried-and-true technique has worked for many
students.
8.Review the common spelling rules explained in this chapter. Take the
necessary time to master the material.
Tip
Part one:
Part two:
Exercise 2: misspelling words
3- Word Choice
Effective writing involves making conscious word choices.
1. Spelling: How the word and its different forms are spelled
attached to a word.
• Word used in a sentence: Although he was a premature baby and a scrawny child,
Martin has developed into a strong man.
• Connotation: (Negative) In this sentence the word scrawny may have a negative
connotation in the readers 'minds. They might find it to mean a weakness or a
personal flaw; however, the word fits into the sentence appropriately.
Word Choice/Using Proper Connotations:
• Skinny
• Lean
• Word used in a sentence: My brother has a lean figure, whereas I have a more muscular build.
• Connotation: (Neutral) In this sentence, lean has a neutral connotation. It does not call to mind
an overly skinny person like the word scrawny, nor does imply the positive cultural impressions
of the word skinny. It is merely a neutral descriptive word.
• Notice that all the words have a very similar denotation; however, the connotations of each
word differ
Exercise 3: Connotation Exercise
Word Choice/Avoiding Slang:
Clichés are descriptive expressions that have lost their effectiveness because they
are overused.
Writing that uses clichés often suffers from a lack of originality and insight.
Avoiding clichés in formal writing will help you write in original and fresh ways.
Word Choice/Avoiding Clichés:
• Specific words and images make your writing more interesting to read.
Whenever possible, avoid overly general words in your writing; instead,
try to replace general language with particular nouns, verbs, and
modifiers that convey details and that bring yours words to life.
• During your academic studies, your instructors will ask you to write
essays that are fact based and academic in tone.
• This means you will only be able to show your opinions by the choice
of ideas you discuss and how you present your evidence.
• When you write pieces full of emotion without facts, the reader is
less likely to trust your argument.
5- Reading Comprehension Techniques
• How to distinguish the main ideas in a passage from the more specific supporting
details.
• Inferences (are not usually written and must be concluded by the reader).
Exercise 7: main idea
Reading for Patterns
Table 2.2: Key words for Identifying Idea Patterns shows key words you
can use to help you identify patterns with ideas in relation to the four
groupings listed above.
Reading for Implications/Inferences:
• When a writer implies something, he or she is giving hints but does not state
the point directly. The reader may not actually pick up on the hints or maybe
even interpret them differently.
• Sometimes readers make inferences that are based more on their own
preferences and experience than on the information provided.
• For you as a writer, you need to remember that it is your responsibility to give
the readers everything they need in order for them to arrive at the
conclusions you want them to make. If you are not direct, readers may be left
confused or not catch your point.
Reference
• Horkoff, T. (2018). Writing for Success: 1st Canadian Edition.