Wridea.com. Ideas Create unlimited amount of ideas and start sharing any one of them with your friends.
Get the opportunity of collaborating over your ideas with your friends. Pages Categorize your ideas under different pages. Share each page with different friend groups, make them private or public. Categories Prioritize your ideas by assigning different categories with different colors. Friends Invite your friends to Wridea and share your ideas, pages with your friends. Page Sharing Share your pages with your friends or all Wridea community.
Idea Sharing Share your specific ideas with your friends, friend groups or Wridea community. Commenting on Ideas Make great discussions and brainstorming sessions by the help of your friends. Idea Searching Search your ideas on-the-fly with the state-of-art search engine. Tools and API Looking for a way to use Wridea in a more personalized or customized environment? Idea Rain Let your ideas rain! Sign up now - Signing up is free and only takes a minute. Book Country: Discover New Fiction with the Genre Map. Publishers, booksellers, and readers describe books by their literary categories, or genres.
It's how books are placed in stores and sold online. We created the Genre Map to help you find the right genre for your book. Roll over the map with your cursor to see the different genres. Some categories, such as women's fiction, stand alone. If you select mystery, fantasy, romance, science fiction, or thriller, you'll see the many subgenres that you can explore within these categories. Please contact us if there's a category you'd like to see on the Genre Map. How to Write a Novel Using the Snowflake Method. The Best of Daily Writing Tips in 2011. The Best of Daily Writing Tips in 2011 by Daniel Scocco First of all happy new year to all the Daily Writing Tips readers!
Rest assured we’ll keep sending you our best writing tips in 2012. Below you’ll find a compilation of the most visited posts we published in 2011. Make sure you haven’t missed any! Related Articles Share. Guide to Grammar and Writing. 20 Common Grammar Mistakes That (Almost) Everyone Gets Wrong. I’ve edited a monthly magazine for more than six years, and it’s a job that’s come with more frustration than reward.
If there’s one thing I am grateful for — and it sure isn’t the pay — it’s that my work has allowed endless time to hone my craft to Louis Skolnick levels of grammar geekery. As someone who slings red ink for a living, let me tell you: grammar is an ultra-micro component in the larger picture; it lies somewhere in the final steps of the editing trail; and as such it’s an overrated quasi-irrelevancy in the creative process, perpetuated into importance primarily by bitter nerds who accumulate tweed jackets and crippling inferiority complexes. But experience has also taught me that readers, for better or worse, will approach your work with a jaundiced eye and an itch to judge. While your grammar shouldn’t be a reflection of your creative powers or writing abilities, let’s face it — it usually is. Who and Whom This one opens a big can of worms. Which and That Lay and Lie Moot Nor. Book Samples for Book Lovers.