Excellent work! Thank you for creating it. Your viewers greatly appreciate it. Keep up the good work!
@mohdkasim8677
2 жыл бұрын
very nice, bro from where u did this animation
@theentrepreneur8751
2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for thia
@mfatimah9427
3 жыл бұрын
This lesson is gold ❤ THANK YOU
@ilonagabriel4678
4 жыл бұрын
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4 жыл бұрын
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@Firuzeh
4 жыл бұрын
Great video, thank you🙏🏼
@afterthesmash
5 жыл бұрын
2:29 Starts listing types of words (noun, verb, etc.) Can't go there. I must be looking for something that dives straight into the deep end of the pool.
@Firuzeh
4 жыл бұрын
@Allan Stokes It was really great knowing what you were looking for. The kind of information that is essential for people who come here to have and not the actual great video which many will find very helpful.
@afterthesmash
4 жыл бұрын
@@Firuzeh Great information about nouns and verbs? The problem is that the content here does not pertain to writing well, but seems instead to address assembling a minimally competent sentence whatsoever. An actual tutorial on writing well would cover much the same ground as William Zinsser's famous book titled, ahem, _On Writing Well: The Classic Guide to Writing Nonfiction,_ where the chapters cover simplicity, clutter, style, usage, unity, the sound of your own voice, and writing as well as you can; things that actually matter to writing once you get well beyond the basic mechanics of subject-verb-object, which apparently on KZitem qualifies as an Nùng River expedition into the very Heart of Difficulty and Darkness.
@afterthesmash
4 жыл бұрын
@@Firuzeh From Zinsser himself: "Unlike medicine or the other sciences, writing has no new discoveries to spring on us. We’re in no danger of reading in our morning newspaper that a breakthrough has been made in how to write a clear English sentence-that information has been around since the King James Bible. We know that verbs have more vigor than nouns, that active verbs are better than passive verbs, that short words and sentences are easier to read than long ones, that concrete details are easier to process than vague abstractions." _On Being a Master Carpenter,_ Chapter 2, Wood Comes from Trees; Chapter 3, Nails are Made of Steel. _That's_ what I was objecting to. It's good information, of course, but I'm totally missing the craft part, where "well" begins to have any useful meaning at all.
@afterthesmash
5 жыл бұрын
0:50 Missing show notes: www.slideshare.net/badmsm/on-writing-well www.thesimpledollar.com/review-on-writing-well/
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