This document discusses the importance of word choice in writing. It provides examples of commonly confused word pairs and discusses criteria writers should consider when selecting words, including accuracy, precision, concreteness, and appropriateness. Accuracy means using words that correctly convey the intended meaning. Precision involves selecting more specific words to provide all necessary details. Concreteness prefers words that evoke sensory images over abstract terms. Appropriateness means choosing words suitable for the writing purpose and intended audience. Mastering word choice is a key part of developing strong writing skills.
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0 ratings0% found this document useful (0 votes)
48 views
Lesson Two
This document discusses the importance of word choice in writing. It provides examples of commonly confused word pairs and discusses criteria writers should consider when selecting words, including accuracy, precision, concreteness, and appropriateness. Accuracy means using words that correctly convey the intended meaning. Precision involves selecting more specific words to provide all necessary details. Concreteness prefers words that evoke sensory images over abstract terms. Appropriateness means choosing words suitable for the writing purpose and intended audience. Mastering word choice is a key part of developing strong writing skills.
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 12
LESSON TWO
LANGUAGE: THE IMPORTANCE OF
WORD CHOICE IN WRITING PREPARED BY: JADE ARJAY A. JACOB, LPT Activity 101: Choose the correct word to complete the sentence. 1. Her dress perfectly (complements/compliments) the shade of her eyes. 2. Gamete had (borne/born) the Elven sword Telomere hither and yon across the kingdom of Fallopia. 3. Aides said the leaders conferred by telephone to (ensure/assure/insure) that their speeches, while different in tone, would not be incompatible. 4. But Iran routinely (censors/censures) the Internet using sophisticated filtering technology 5. “I’d like to see him a little more (discrete/discreet) at times,” she said. “I would hope he would learn a little more diplomacy.” As a writer, how important is a word/s to you?
In the writer’s toolbox, word are probably the most
important tool. It is not just a matter of learning enough words and expanding one’s vocabulary; the value lies in knowing when to use them. Even if it seems like a word is synonymous with another, each one actually produce a different register or effect, just as home is not the same as residence. How can we able to know when to use a word?
To know when to use a word, you must first look up
its actual dictionary meaning or denotation.Then, it would be definitely helpful to also search for its connotation or other concepts and feelings that the word may invoke. This ensures that the word you chose is the best fit and unintended meanings are avoided Choice or Words: The Importance of Word Choice in Writing All strong writers have something in common: they understand the value of word choice in writing. Strong word choice uses vocabulary and language to maximum effect, creating clear moods and images and making your stories and poems more powerful and vivid. DICTION After determing which word to use for your writing, the following criteria must also be considered according to the Creative Writer’s Handbook: Accuracy Precision Concreteness Appropriateness ACCURACY When a word is accurate, it is free from error. It is “correct” in the sense that its accepted meaning is the meaning that the author intends. Saying that X is a small man is very different from saying that X is a short man. Or it can be. Another example of an inaccurate choice of words is one that is based on misconceptions or misunderstandings of the language. For most of us, English is not our first language. This may be the reason we have a tendency to confuse certain words in the English language with another. Homonyms are common examples of this because they sound alike but are spelled differently. SOme of the commonly confused words according to the Oxford Dictionary accept vs except ensure vs insure advice vs. advise loose vs lose affect vs effect prescribe vs proscribe born vs borne principal vs principle censure vs censor complement vs compliment defuse vs diffuse discreet vs discrete PRECISION One can be accurate with word choice, but not precise. You can refer to a Facebook “friend” as real friend, but maybe you consider him or as an acquaintance or a buddy. You can be more specific and say he is a classmate or schoolmate of your actual best friend. Whatever it is, “friend” would be too generic, and in some cases, the more precise the term is, the better. The meanings of words have greater and lesser ranges. It may be correct to use a certain word, and therefore accurate. But is it precise enough? Is it providing all the information needed? Precision is also matter of context. It targets the connotation of a word, as well as its denotation. A lawyer at court might use the word “Spouse” rather than “Husband” or “Wife”, if only to limit the emphasis on the legal context CONCRETENESS In creative writing, concrete diction is usually preferred over a general or abstract word choice. By evoking images and appealing to the senses, concrete words allow the reader to be immersed in that imaginary world and even experience what the characters are going through. Unless abstraction is needed, concrete diction is the way to go. Concrete diction evokes images, bits of sensory experience. The writer can tell you that Tom is angry, or he can tell you that Tom is fuming. You know what angry means, it satisfies the meaning. But “fuming” is concrete. It creates a vivid picture that is more efficient, more memorable in your mind. A writer has to create a sensory experience for his readers through his words. APPROPRIATENESS a writer’s choice of words is also anchored on the first two questions one asks before setting out to write: What is my purpose and who is my audience? Depending on the answers to these two, diction will be considered appropriate if both are kept in mind. if you are asked to write a report on the effects of Facebook consumption on your generation, it would be wise to maintain an objective and formal stance, and word choice will definitely set the tone for the paper. However, if you were to write a romantic story where the heroine is obsessed over someone she met online, then the overall diction would be more conversational and young. a writer who knows the audience will know exactly what diction to use in order to satisfy their demands. Because you are writing for a readership that you have chosen yourself, you already know what language risks offending your readers, and therefore what language is inappropriate to use. In the same manner, depending on your subject, setting and genre, you will choose your diction in terms of appropriateness. THE END.......THANK YOU!!!!!!!!
This is Not Your High School English Class: What You Really Need to Know to Succeed in First Semester English Composition I: Not High School English, #1
Decoding Body Language: Crack the Code of Human Behavior, Speed Read People Like a Book, and Learn How to Analyze People with NLP, Manipulation, Dark Psychology, Mind Control, and Persuasion Skills.
(SUNY Series in Chinese Philosophy and Culture) William Franke - Apophatic Paths From Europe To China - Regions Without Borders-State University of New York Press (2018)
(Ebook) Racing for the Bomb: General Leslie R. Groves, the Manhattan Project's Indispensable Man by Robert S. Norris ISBN 9781586420390, 1586420399 download pdf
(Ebook) Satisficing Games and Decision Making: With Applications to Engineering and Computer Science by Wynn C. Stirling ISBN 9780521817240, 9780511061165, 0511061161, 0521817242 - Experience the full ebook by downloading it now