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The Century Handbook of Writing Part 48

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=g. Avoid detailed subordination. Especially avoid a single subheading when it can be joined to the preceding line, or omitted.=

Too detailed:

A The McClellan Orchard 1 Situation a On a northern slope 2 Nature of soil a Sandy 3 Kind of fruit a Apple b Cherry

Right:

A The McClellan Orchard 1. Situation: a northern slope 2. Nature of soil: sandy 3. Kind of fruit: apple and cherry



Exercise:

1. Give a t.i.tle to an outline which shall include the following topics. Group the topics under two main headings, and give the headings names.

Uses of the grape The Vine The Fruit Itself How Marketed How Cultivated

2. Place in order the sentences of the following outline on "Why Keep a Diary?" Subordinate some of the headings to others.

A diary affords great satisfaction in future years.

We sometimes record in a diary information which proves useful.

A few lines a day will suffice.

A diary is not hard to keep.

We may find time for writing in our diary if we do not waste time at the table or on newspapers.

We may write in our diary just before we go to bed.

A diary will bring back the past.

We all have some moments to kill.

A diary gives us pleasure even in the present.

3. Place in order the headings of the following outline on "Ulysses S. Grant." Subordinate some of the headings to others.

Obscurity in 1861 Prominence in 1865 Patience President General Perseverance and Resolution Character The Turning Point in His Career

=Letters=

The parts of a letter are the heading, the inside address, the greeting, the body, the close, and the signature. For these parts good use prescribes definite forms, which we may sometimes ignore in personal letters, but must rigidly observe in formal or business letters.

=87a. The heading of a letter should give the full address of the writer and the date of writing. Do not abbreviate short words, or omit Street or Avenue.=

Objectionable: #15 Hickory, Omaha.

Right: 15 Hickory Street, Omaha, Nebraska.

Objectionable: 4/12/19; 10-28-'16; May 2nd, 1910.

Right: April 12, 1919; October 28, 1916; May 2, 1910.

The following headings are correct:

106 East Race Street, Red Oak, Iowa, August 4, 1916.

423 Michigan Avenue Chicago, Illinois May 20, 1918

Prescott, Arizona, June 1, 1920.

Note.--In personal letters the heading may be transferred to the end, below the signature, at the left-hand side. But it must not be so divided that the street address will appear in one place and the town and state in another.

The "closed" form of punctuation (the use of punctuation at the ends of the lines) is best until the student learns what is correct. Afterward, the adoption of the "open" form becomes purely a matter of individual taste and not a matter of carelessness or ignorance.

=b. An inside address and a greeting are required in business letters.= Personal letters contain the greeting, but may omit the inside address, or may supply it at the end of the letter.

The Jeffrey Chemical Works, 510 Marion Street, Norfolk, Virginia.

Gentlemen:

Mr. Joseph N. Kellogg 1411 Lake Street Cleveland, Ohio

Dear Mr. Kellogg:

Secretary of Rice Inst.i.tute, Houston, Texas.

My dear Sir:

Greetings used in business letters are:

My dear Sir: My dear Madam: My dear Mr. Fisher: Dear Sir: Sir: Sirs: Gentlemen: Ladies:

Greetings used in personal letters are:

My dear Miss Brown: Dear Professor Ward: Dear Jones, Dear Mrs. Vincent, Dear Robert, Dear Olive,

"My dear Miss Brown" is more ceremonious than "Dear Miss Brown". As a rule, the more familiar the letter, the shorter the greeting.

A colon follows the greeting if the letter is formal or long; a comma, if the letter is familiar or in the nature of a note.

Both inside address and greeting begin at the left-hand margin. The body of the letter begins on the line below the greeting, and is indented as much as an ordinary paragraph (about an inch).

=c. The body of a letter should be written in correct style.=

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