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kiwifarms.net
This is a blog post, but it reads like a school paper. You know, like if you ask a child to write about something they did over the weekend. It's stilted, no natural voice to it. I've seen it a lot with bad writers. They don't know how to make a story flow, so reading their writing is more stumbling around unnecessary wording. Basic grammar is there, but the style is nonexistent. My last post talked about that, when I mentioned that you can tell she has no promise as a writer? A lot of it is because she lacks a writing voice. This is Chris' problem as well. His CWCisms make it even worse. So yeah. They sound similar because they can't write in a natural style. It's not uncommon, but most people struggle with it in creative writing.
tl;dr That post sounds like something a particularly verbose Data would say.
It's a pretty common issue, but starting sentences with "immediately" and "suddenly" is like a writing speed bump. Integrating them into the sentence, or removing them entirely, helps. "But" in the way she used it also does that, though generally you're not supposed to use it at the beginning of a sentence anyway. She could combine several of those sentences and trim a lot of fat. Take "With the help of my girlfriend, I had dyed my hair completely into the colors of a pink and purple ombre." You could cut it down to "My girlfriend helped me dye my hair pink and purple ombre." I don't know how to refer to ombre in that context, but you get the idea.
ACTUALLY, I just noticed a huge thing. She doesn't use contractions. Granted, in that post there aren't many potential contractions, but leaving those few expanded makes a difference. Avoiding contractions is something you do in an academic essay, not a blog post.
That's my take on it, at least. I'm sure better writers could find more to pick out.
ACTUALLY, I just noticed a huge thing. She doesn't use contractions. Granted, in that post there aren't many potential contractions, but leaving those few expanded makes a difference. Avoiding contractions is something you do in an academic essay, not a blog post.
That's my take on it, at least. I'm sure better writers could find more to pick out.