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I Write Therefore I Am

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Problems With Grammar Check & Spell Check. Reasons Why Reading Is Important for Children. English Grammar Rules & Usage. Digital Spell-Checking May Be Killing Off Words | Dying Language. The death rate of words has apparently increased recently while new entries into languages are becoming less common, both perhaps because of digital spell-checking, according to a Google-aided analysis of more than 10 million words. More than 4 percent of the world's books have now been digitized, a trove that includes seven languages and dates back to the 16th century. All of this text offers new opportunities to study how language evolves.

Researchers analyzed English, Spanish and Hebrew texts from 1800 to 2008 that had been digitized by Google. "We are now able to analyze language comprising not only the common words, but also the extremely rare words, and not just for yesterday but for yesteryear, and not just for yesteryear, but back to a time before most people can track their family lineage," said researcher Alexander Petersen, a physicist at the Institutions Markets Technologies Lucca Institute for Advanced Studies in Italy.

Clarity. Readers, like writers, are busy people, and they are unlikely to spend time trying to decipher the meaning of wordy, vague, or confusing text. Therefore, writers should themselves spend the time to ensure that their writing is as clear as possible. Writing clearly should be one of the most important objectives, if not the most important objective, of good writers. The ability to write clearly is of course a skill that is learned over time, primarily through reading good writing and through the actual act of writing.

Like any skill, the more you write, the clearer and more effective your writing will become. Avoid Jargon Jargon is specialized language used by the members of a particular field or industry, organization, or other group. Jargon is also language that has been inflated or made flowery simply for the purpose of impressing others. Avoid Obsolete or Invented Words In most contexts, it is best to avoid using words that are obsolete and no longer used or that are invented. Eats, Shoots & Leaves. How the Brain Unscrambles Jumbled Letters | Why Poelpe Can Raed This, 4ND 7H15 | Why People Can Read Jumbled Words and Numbers In Place of Letters. You might not realize it, but your brain is a code-cracking machine. For emaxlpe, it deson’t mttaer in waht oredr the ltteers in a wrod aepapr, the olny iprmoatnt tihng is taht the frist and lsat ltteer are in the rghit pcale.

The rset can be a toatl mses and you can sitll raed it wouthit pobelrm. Passages like these have been bouncing around the Internet for years. But how do we read them? According to Marta Kutas, a cognitive neuroscientist and the director of the Center for Research in Language at the University of California, San Diego, the short answer is that no one knows why we're so good at reading garbled nonsense. "My guess is that context is very, very, very important," Kutas told Life's Little Mysteries. We use context to pre-activate the areas of our brains that correspond to what we expect next, she explained.

It's not a perfect system, however.