- Popular Idioms and Usages Part P
- The Skylight Room by O Henry
- Guide to Getting Published: Typescript Formatting
- How to Perfect Your Writing Style
- Contributions Invited to CuteWriting
- Popular Idioms and Usages Part O
- Guide to Getting Published: Preparing Your Novel’s Query Letter
- A Literary Classic for You
- Plural Forms: Rules and Style Guidelines
- New Additions to Blog!
- Punctuation Tip: Brackets, Braces, and Parentheses
- Guide to Getting Published: Literary Agent FAQ
- Popular Idioms and Usages Part N
- Guide to Getting Published: Are You There Yet?
- Mozilla Firefox Express Review
- Punctuation Tip: The Ellipsis
- Question Tags
- Popular Idioms and Usages Part M
- CuteWriting Copyright Policy
- Special Post: Movie Review of Dashavatharam (Dasavatharam)
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- Some Creative Writing Thoughts: Style, Diligence, Boldness, and Research
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- A Sherlock Holmes Detective Story for You!
- Do You Need Prompts for Creative Writing?
- Popular Idioms and Usages Part L
- My Pet Peeves: Mistakes in English I Hate
- Writer’s Block Buster: Some Tips
- Popular Idioms and Usages Part K
- William Sydney Porter (O Henry): Short Story Legend
- What is The Cockney Rhyming Slang?
- En Dash, Em Dash, and Hyphen
- Special Post: Some Thoughts and a News Story
- Power of Short Sentences
- Popular Idioms and Usages Part J
Post dedicated to Thomas Hardy (see History Today below). There are monster sentences like the one you encounter as the first paragraph of Oliver Twist by Charles Dickens . One of my friends, whom I am getting equipped for his IELTS ( what is this? ), told me that the examination recommends long sentences. In writing classes also, I guess it’s longer sentences most tutors promote. But indubitably shorter sentences are more powerful . We will see why. Take a long sentence for instance: Tom Cruise, one of the finest actors in the whole world, is perhaps the most powerful celebrity to exist ever according to Time Magazine, but many people still dispute this fact and point out that there are more powerful and popular actors than Cruise, though they were unsuccessful in providing the total number of fans, who liked the films of those actors. This is a long sentence and it is very confusing . Though it has a logical construction and conveys a meaning, it falters in many occasions and seems