Self-help writing tutorials:
Skilled editing is central to achieving high-quality Wikipedia articles. This is a set of exercises in which you are presented with a portion of faulty text. It may contain problems of grammar, logic, cohesion, tone, lexical choice, punctuation or redundant wording. In some cases, there are breaches of Wikipedia's Manual of style.
Unlike our exercises in eliminating redundant wording, most of the exercises don't concentrate on a specific aspect of writing or editing; here, you need to be aware of all of the things that can go wrong in constructing text. The challenge is not knowing in advance what has gone wrong. This is more like the real-life situation you face as an editor of Wikipedia articles.
"Unfolding" design. The exercises are designed to be done in your head, without writing. On purpose, each unfolds in stages: first, the problem text, then usually one or two hints, then a solution, and finally an explanation. You'll get the most out of the exercises by thinking carefully about each stage before clicking on the next one. Expect to stop when you've had enough, and plan to return to take up where you left off. "Distributed" ("spaced out") practice of writing skills, not "massed" (all at once), will have a more powerful effect.
The examples are mostly taken from featured article candidates. We've removed reference numbers and links to avoid clutter. Feedback on how to improve the exercises is welcome on the talk page. Thanks to User:Gary King for developing the "Editing exercise template" in use here.
Instructions: click on [Show] to the right of each stage. Good luck!
Short examples I
Exercise 1: Teen pop idol
Problem text
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He was a teen pop idol from 1964–1979, and since then he has forged a career as an adult contemporary singer. |
Hint 1
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Hint 2
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Solution
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He was a teen pop idol from |
Explanation
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Exercise 2: Canadian politics
Problem text
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The Liberal Party had governed the nation since 1935, and had won five consecutive elections. |
Hint 1
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What's the relationship between the two clauses (either side of the comma)? How are these statements connected logically? |
Hint 2
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Joining the two statements with "and" belies the causality: it's because they'd won five consecutive elections that they'd been in power so long. But don't use "because". |
Solution
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The Liberal Party had governed the nation since 1935, |
Explanation
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Now the causal logic is clear. |
Exercise 3: Welfare state
Problem text
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The Liberals were generally successful, with the nation prosperous and an increasing welfare state. [In the article, this comes straight after the previous statement in Exercise 2.] |
Hints
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Possible solution
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The Liberals |
Explanation
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The welfare state bit is only one way of clarifying it. |
Exercise 4: Committee grows tired of chairman
Problem text
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His father was a lawyer, judge and, for 31 years, a Congressman who chaired the House Naval Affairs Committee during the Harding and Coolidge administrations. |
Hint 1
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So he chaired the Committee for 31 years? Two US presidential administrations couldn't possibly last for 31 years (16 is the theoretical maximum). |
Hint 2
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What a difference a comma would make. |
Possible solution
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His father was a lawyer, judge, and for 31 years a Congressman, who chaired the House Naval Affairs Committee during the Harding and Coolidge administrations. |
Explanation
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The comma clarifies that he was "Congressman" for 31 years, not the chair of the committee for 31 years. |
Exercise 5: South Korean army
Problem text
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The smaller South Korean army suffered from widespread lack of organisation and equipment, and it was unprepared for war. [This could be improved in two ways.] |
What are these two issues?
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Solution
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The smaller South Korean army suffered from a widespread lack of organisation and equipment, and |
Explanation
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Exercise 6: David Bellamy
Problem text
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A protest group was formed to resist the proposed construction, which attracted support from the botanist and environmental campaigner David Bellamy. |
Hint 1
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What's the relationship between the clauses (separated by the comma)? Which part of the first clause does the second clause refer back to? |
Hint 2
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So the proposed construction attracted support from Bellamy? The intended meaning is probably means something very different. |
Solution
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A protest group was formed to resist the proposed construction, |
Explanation
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Now it's clear that the protest group attracted Bellamy's support, not the construction. |
That's enough thinking for now. Go have a rest, and come back tomorrow and do the next set.
Short examples II
Exercise 7: Market town
Problem text
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Navenby, which has Bronze Age, Roman and Medieval heritage, was made a market town with charters from Edward the Confessor, William Rufus, and Richard II. However, the market fell into disuse in the early 19th century. [There's one issue.] |
What is the issue?
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A problem of logical cohesion between the two sentences. |
Where is the issue?
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Navenby, which has Bronze Age, Roman and Medieval heritage, was made a market town with charters from Edward the Confessor, William Rufus, and Richard II. However, the market fell into disuse in the early 19th century. |
Solution
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Navenby, which has Bronze Age, Roman and Medieval heritage, was made a market town with charters from Edward the Confessor, William Rufus, and Richard II; however, despite this long heritage, the market fell into disuse in the early 19th century. |
Explanation
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However tells your reader that you're going to contradict or change the previous angle in some way; but just how this is the case is not sufficiently clear. We've guessed that the writer's point is ironic, and reinforced the close relationship with a semicolon rather than a period. |
Exercise 8: FA Cup Final
Problem text
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Montgomery's feat is often described as the most famous save, in an FA Cup Final, of all time. |
What is the issue?
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The bumpety-bump punctuation and the separation of wording that belongs together. |
Where is the issue?
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The middle phrase ("in an FA Cup Final"). |
Hint
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Move the middle phrase ("in an FA Cup Final"). |
Solution
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Montgomery's feat is often described as the most famous save of all time in an FA Cup Final.
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Exercise 9: Sunderland
Problem text
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Sunderland required only a draw in their final game against rivals Chelsea, who had another game left to play after this match, to secure promotion. [It has a clunky feel to it; why?] |
What is the issue?
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The order of ideas in the sentence is the problem. |
Where is the issue?
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Sunderland required only a draw in their final game against rivals Chelsea, who had another game left to play after this match, to secure promotion. |
Hint
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Can you work out how to reposition the last phrase so it's not stuck out at the end of a long sentence? |
Solution
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To secure promotion, Sunderland required only a draw in their final game against rivals Chelsea, who had another game left to play after this match. |
Exercise 10: Shots at the goal
Problem text
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Sunderland, a Second Division club at the time, won the game, mostly due to the efforts of their goalkeeper Jimmy Montgomery; he saved in quick succession two of Peter Lorimer's shots at the goal. |
What is the issue?
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The order and relative length of the ideas, and the punctuation. |
Where is the issue?
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The first chain is too long; the second fragment (after the semicolon) is too short. Try recasting the join between them, including a different punctuation mark and different grammar. |
Solution
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Sunderland, a Second Division club at the time, won the game; this was mostly due to the efforts of their goalkeeper Jimmy Montgomery, who saved in quick succession two of Peter Lorimer's shots at the goal. |
Exercise 11: 32 million albums
Problem text
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The Association ranks her as the eighth-best-selling female artist in American music history, having sold 32 million albums in the US. [Ambiguity is the issue.] |
What the issues are
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The relationship between the two segments in the sentence is ambiguous. |
Where the issues are
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The Association ranks her as the eighth-best-selling female artist in American music history, having sold 32 million albums in the US. |
Solution
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Having sold 32 million albums in the US, she is ranked by the Association as the eighth-best-selling female artist in American music history. |
Explanation
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Reversing the order of the segments and using the passive voice is one way of ensuring that it is she and not the Association is clearly conveyed as having sold 32 million albums in the US. We usually try to ration the use of the passive voice, but here it works quite well. |
Short examples III
Exercise 12
Ms Ima Hogg; yes, parents can be cruel.
Problem text
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For their home, the Hoggs chose the largest lot, 14.5 acres (5.9 ha). Ima worked closely with architect John Staub to design the house so that it would show off the art the family had already purchased. [The task is to produce neater wording by removing four words and changing a fifth.] |
What the issues are
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Where the issues are
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For their home, the Hoggs chose the largest lot, 14.5 acres (5.9 ha). Ima worked closely with architect John Staub to design the house so that it would show off the art the family had already purchased. |
Solution
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For their home, the Hoggs chose the largest lot, 14.5 acres (5.9 ha). Ima worked closely with architect John Staub to design |
Explanation
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Exercise 13
Problem text
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Concern over the spouting water potentially knocking people down made the design both a legal and a physical challenge. [There are six issues!] |
What the issues are
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Where the issues are
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Concern over the spouting water potentially knocking people down made the design both a legal and a physical challenge. |
Solution
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The risk that the spouting water would knock people down was both a legal and physical design challenge. |
Explanations
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Exercise 14
Problem text
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Artificial turf was installed because it was easier to maintain than natural grass. The potential damage to a natural grass field caused by Seattle's frequent rain also made the surface an appropriate option. |
What the issues are
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Hint
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The bits we don't like are in green. The repetition is underlined. See if this helps you to think of a neater solution.
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Solution
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Artificial turf was installed because it was easier to maintain than natural grass, and would be less vulnerable to damage from Seattle's frequent rain. |
Explanations
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Exercise 15
Problem text
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Odex sent letters of demand to people associated with IP addresses after sufficient downloading activity had been recorded. [Just one issue.] |
What is the issue?
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It's ambiguous. What are the two possible meanings? (Even if one is much less likely, it shouldn't be an option—the "fork" makes the reader work a little harder, even if they're not aware of why.) |
Further hint
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The two possible meanings are:
Clearly, the second meaning is intended. How do you reword to force this meaning? |
It's surprisingly simple
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Reverse the order of the clauses. |
Solution
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After sufficient downloading activity had been recorded, Odex sent letters of demand to people associated with IP addresses. |
Explanations
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Easy-peasy. But the hardest thing was to pick up that it was ambiguous in the first place. Good editors learn to scrutinise every sentence for possible multiple meanings. |
Exercise 16
Problem text
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The Soviets were as alarmed by the problem as their East German protégés. [Just one issue.] |
What is the issue?
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Exactly as alarmed as each other? This might be called a false equative, or a forced equality. |
Solution
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Both Soviet and East German regimes were alarmed by the problem. Other solutions are possible, including statements that retain the "protégé" idea; it depends on the context. In the same article, there was another forced equative: "The East German government had an equally important incentive [as the West German government]"—was it exactly equal?" As a side-comment, let's decry this tired and cumbersome attempt at elegance: "Three earthquakes in as many months"; or the ludicrous example once heard on ABC Radio news: "One incident in as many months". Pffff. |
Exercise 17
Problem text
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DPIs have many advantages over liquid nebulisers: the drug is more stable, dosing is rapid, the devices are less expensive, and can be manufactured in a disposable form. |
What is the issue?
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This is a list. There's a problem in the way the items are organised; it's not to do with their order. |
Hint
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How many items are there? Four? |
Further hint
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There are four in a way, but on a higher structural level there are only three, concerning (1) "the drug"; (2) "dosing", and (3) "the devices". It's really 1, 2, 3a, 3b. So what about the boundaries between them? Remember the old rules?
Both apply here, on different structural levels. |
Solution
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DPIs have many advantages over liquid nebulisers: the drug is more stable, dosing is rapid, and the devices are less expensive and can be manufactured in a disposable form. |
Explanations
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1, 2, and 3, but expanded out, it's 1, 2, and 3a and 3b. Here it is again, with the numbers interpolated: "DPIs have many advantages over liquid nebulisers: (1) the drug is more stable, (2) dosing is rapid, and the devices (3a) are less expensive and (3b) can be manufactured in a disposable form." We've removed the comma between 3a and 3b to stress their connectedness. |
Exercise 18
Problem text
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Judge Thomas Mellon, a retired common pleas judge from Allegheny County, purchased the Ligonier Valley Railroad at auction. |
What is the issue?
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Can we avoid the repeated word? |
Hint
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Judge Thomas Mellon, a retired common pleas judge from Allegheny County, purchased the Ligonier Valley Railroad at auction. |
Solution
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Retired common pleas judge Thomas Mellon from Allegheny County purchased the Ligonier Valley Railroad at auction. |
Explanations
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Short examples IV
Exercise 19
Problem text
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The main attraction will be a new 301-foot (92 m)-tall swing ride known as WindSeeker. |
What is the issue?
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The compound hyphenated structure is clunky. Is there a simple solution? |
Hint
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Try rearranging the order within "a new 301-foot (92 m)-tall swing ride". |
Solution
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The main attraction will be a new swing ride 301 feet (92 m) tall, known as WindSeeker. |
Exercise 20
Problem text
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The castle has been the subject of antiquarian studies since the 18th century, and it was originally thought to have been the ___location of an Iron Age hill fort. |
What is the issue?
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One word could be removed, to bring two benefits. |
Hint
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"Ellipsis", it's called. |
Solution
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The castle has been the subject of antiquarian studies since the 18th century, and |
Explanation
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Two benefits: first, the ellipsis, in which the readers effortlessly assume the invisible presence of the now-missing word, is neater; second, there were two singular nouns that "it" might have referred to, and the reader has to work just a little to get over that fuzziness, even though it's obvious "it" doesn't refer to "the 18th century". |
Exercise 21
Problem text
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The castle is oval, with an 11-metre (35 ft) wide stone curtain wall. |
What is the issue?
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Even without Wikipedia's necessary binary international/US unit conversions, this is a cumbersome expression, and strictly speaking requires a triple unit, hyphenated: "The castle is oval, with an 11-metre-wide stone curtain wall." |
Hint
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Change the word order. |
Solution
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The castle is oval, with a stone curtain wall 11 metres (35 ft) wide.
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Exercise 22
Problem text
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Buckton Castle was probably built by William de Neville, Lord of Longdendale, in the late 12th century; which would make it contemporary with other castles in Greater Manchester, such as Dunham and Stockport. |
What is the issue?
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Punctuation / sentence structure. |
Hint
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Buckton Castle was probably built by William de Neville, Lord of Longdendale, in the late 12th century; which would make it contemporary with other castles in Greater Manchester, such as Dunham and Stockport.
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Solution
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..., in the late 12th century, which would make it contemporary with other castles in Greater Manchester, such as Dunham and Stockport.
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Exercise 23
The problem text
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Due to his background in taxonomy and paleontology, Cope focused on evolution in changing structural terms, rather than Darwin's emphasis on geography and variation within populations. |
Hints
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A solution
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Due to his background in taxonomy and paleontology, Cope focused on evolution in terms of changing structure, rather than Darwin's strategy of emphasising geography and variation within populations. |
Explanation
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This is only one way of doing it. |
Exercise 24
The problem text
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In 2009, he set a new OHL record for career goals as he finished the season with 215, two more than former record holder Peter Lee. |
Hints
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Is it a "because/since as" or a "while as"? "As" in this sense is a badly engineered word in English and better avoided. Peter Lee is over-described if "two more than" is there. Lose four words and simplify the structure to avoid the "as" problem. |
A solution
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In 2009, he finished the season with a career total of 215 goals, breaking Peter Lee's OHL record by two. |
Exercise 25
The problem text
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Three-blade turbines are the most common design for modern windmills, as the design minimises forces related to material fatigue. [This is the caption to a picture of a three-blade wind turbine.] |
Hint
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"Design" is repeated. The causal relationship between the two ideas doesn't need to be explicitly flagged by a word such as "as". |
Two alternative solutions
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Alternatively, you could change the grammatical theme (the writer's point of departure for the message, the "what I'm going to tell you about"):
For one angle on grammatical theme, see Thematic equative. |
Longer examples
Exercise 26
Problem text
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St-Calais continued to hold out in Durham, claiming he had never rebelled. When the king approached with an army, St-Calais agreed to come out, but only after receiving a safe conduct that would allow him to attend a trial while his men continued to hold the castle. From his actions, it appears likely that St-Calais did rebel, whatever his statements to the contrary, although northern chronicles maintained his innocence. [There's just one issue; can you pinpoint it?] |
What is the issue?
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The logical connection between two phrases. |
Where is the issue?
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St-Calais continued to hold out in Durham, claiming he had never rebelled. When the king approached with an army, St-Calais agreed to come out, but only after receiving a safe conduct that would allow him to attend a trial while his men continued to hold the castle. From his actions, it appears likely that St-Calais did rebel, whatever his claims to the contrary, although northern chronicles maintained his innocence. |
Hint
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Where should the contrast be? Between his claims and what the northern chronicles reported, or is there a more basic contrast? |
Further hint
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Both "whatever his claims to the contrary" and the fact that "northern chronicles maintained his innocence" seem to be on the same side of the conflict between (1) what his actions suggested, and (2) recorded reports of verbal statements. Therefore, although shouldn't contrast the two phrases that are expressing (2); there's another word present that can do the job of contrasting (1) and (2). |
Solution
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St-Calais continued to hold out in Durham, claiming he had never rebelled. When the king approached with an army, St-Calais agreed to come out, but only after receiving a safe conduct that would allow him to attend a trial while his men continued to hold the castle. St-Calais's actions suggest that he did rebel, whatever his claims to the contrary and statements of his innocence in northern chronicles. |
Explanation
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"Whatever" now provides the critical logical contrast between what his actions suggested and the verbal claims. |
Exercise 27
This comes from the lead, which provides a sequence of summary statements about the subsequent text in the article.
The problem text
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Agriculture continues to be a major part of the economy of Somerset. Apple orchards were once plentiful, and to this day the county is linked to the production of strong cider. The unemployment rate in the county is lower than the surrounding counties. The largest employment sectors are retail, manufacturing, leisure/tourism and health/social care. [There are four issues.] |
What the issues are
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Where the issues are
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Agriculture continues to be a major part of the economy of Somerset. Apple orchards were once plentiful, and to this day the county is linked to the production of strong cider. The unemployment rate in the county is lower than the surrounding counties. The largest employment sectors are retail, manufacturing, leisure/tourism and health/social care. |
Solution
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Agriculture continues to be a major part of the economy of Somerset. Apple orchards |
Explanations
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Exercise 28
Problem text
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Jane Zhang (born 11 October 1984) also known as Zhang Liangying is a Chinese pop singer who came to prominence when she placed third in the 2005 season of the Super Girl contest a national all female singing competition held in the People's Republic of China. Throughout the competition, she sang in English, Spanish and Cantonese in addition to Mandarin Chinese. [There are seven issues.] |
What the issues are
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Where the issues are [commas not shown]
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Jane Zhang (born 11 October 1984) also known as Zhang Liangying is a Chinese pop singer who came to prominence when she placed third in the 2005 season of the Super Girl contest a national all female singing competition held in the People's Republic of China. Throughout the competition, she sang in English, Spanish and Cantonese in addition to Mandarin Chinese. |
Solution
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Jane Zhang (born 11 October 1984), also known as Zhang Liangying, is a Chinese pop singer who came to prominence when she was placed third in the 2005 season of the Super Girl |
Explanations
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Exercise 29
Problem text
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Incorporating a number of new developments in steam locomotive technology, the Packets were amongst the first designs to utilise welding in the construction process, which meant that components could be more easily constructed during the wartime austerity and post war economy. [There are six issues.] |
What the issues are
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Where the issues are
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Incorporating a number of new developments in British steam locomotive technology, the Packets were amongst the first designs to utilise welding in the construction process, which meant that components could be more easily constructed during the wartime austerity and post war economy. |
Solution
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Incorporating a number of new developments in steam locomotive technology, the Packets were among the first designs to use welding in the construction process; this enabled the easier fabrication of components during the austerity of the wartime and post-war economy. |
Explanations
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Exercise 30
The problem text
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The locomotives also featured Bulleid's innovative, though controversial chain-driven valve gear and the inclusion of thermic syphons. The class members were named after the Merchant Navy shipping lines involved in the Battle of the Atlantic, and latterly those which used Southampton Docks, an astute publicity masterstroke by the Southern Railway, who operated Southampton Docks during the period. [There are five issues.] |
What the issues are
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Where the issues are
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The locomotives also featured Bulleid's innovative, though controversial chain-driven valve gear and the inclusion of thermic syphons. The class members were named after the Merchant Navy shipping lines involved in the Battle of the Atlantic, and latterly those which used Southampton Docks, an astute publicity masterstroke by the Southern Railway, who operated Southampton Docks during the period. |
Solution
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The locomotives |
Explanations
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