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Tuesday, June 02, 2009

Don't Use Big Words

In promulgating your esoteric cogitations, or articulating your superficial sentimentalities and amicable, philosophical, or psychological observations, beware of platitudinous ponderosity. Let your conversational communications possess a clarified conciseness, a compacted comprehensibleness, a coalescent consistency, and a concatenated cogency. Eschew all conglomerations of flatulent garrulity, jejune babblement, and asinine affectation. Let your extemporaneous descantings and unpremeditated expatiations have intelligibility and veracious vivacity, without rhodomontade, or thrasonical bombast. Sedulously avoid all polysyllabic profundity, pompous prolixity, psittaceous vacuity, ventriloquial verbosity, and vaniloquent vapidity. Shun double entendres, prurient jocosity, and pestiferous profanity, obscure or apparent. In other words, talk plainly, briefly, naturally, truthfully, purely. Keep from " slang"; don't put on airs ; say what you mean ; mean what you say. And don't use big words.

— Pennsylvania School Journal, May, 1875.

6 comments:

  1. I must appreciate you for providing such a valuable content for us. This is one amazing piece of article. Helped a lot in increasing my knowledge. Primavera Online Training | Primavera Course in Chennai

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  2. I disagree. English is blessed with a massive vocabulary for a reason, and words which are never used become moribund over time through a kind of natural selection. Using short, choppy words is a stylistic choice, but not necessarily a good one. By doing so, the author is dumbing down their prose to the lowest possible level, and we get enough of that already from television and movies. Choose your audience. If you're writing for people who read hardback books (at all, ever), then you're writing for people who might also read the New Yorker magazine, and their prose even allows for ligatures and diereses! That doesn't mean to write as this author did, packing his article with large and inelegant words for the sake of humor, but lowering your expectations to the level of a fourth-grade reader isn't realistic, and it doesn't do our collective body of literature any favors. I don't hate small common words, but too many of them is just boring, and I don't read to be bored.

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  4. Thanks for the article. Much thanks again. Cool.
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