Sin and Syntax

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Sin and Syntax: How to Craft Wickedly Effective Prose (1999), by Constance Hale, is an American English guide to stylish prose. The term is often used as a method of teaching writing in an innovative method that combines the academy and the street. The book approaches prose through words, sentences, and music (which includes voice, lyricism, melody and rhythm). It then breaks down each of these ideas into separate chapters that are themselves broken into "bones" (grammar lesson), "flesh" (writing lesson), "cardinal sins" (the don'ts) and "carnal pleasures" (the do's). [1]

Constance Hale is an American writer and critic based in San Francisco. Her journalism has appeared in metropolitan newspapers and national magazines, but she is best known for her books on language: Sin and Syntax; Vex, Hex, Smash, Smooch; and Wired Style. She teaches writing and editing at Harvard University and the University of California at Berkeley.

American English set of dialects of the English language spoken in the US

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References

  1. Hale, Constance (2001) [1999]. Sin and syntax: how to craft wickedly effective prose (1st ed.). Broadway Books. ISBN   0-7679-0309-9 . Retrieved 2009-12-01.
  2. Elster, Charles Harrington, “Leapin’ Lexis!, A feast for verbivores sparks the cry ‘Send in the Nouns’, Section BOOKS, Pg. BOOKS-8, The San Diego Union Tribune, January 23, 2000.
  3. Maza, Mike, “A look at recent self-help books,” Lifestyle Section, The Dallas Morning News, April 10, 2001.
  4. Ed Gray, “Notes and comments If anyone cares, Kaufman bio’s (improbably) amusing,” Features; p. H5, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, April 22, 2001.