Sep. 16th, 2006
(no subject)
Sep. 16th, 2006 04:23 pmI'm constantly worried about my writting. The teachers/professors say to be breif, something that I have no trouble being. But I can't help thinking that I'm being too consise. Today's problem is that I'm to answer two diffrent questions, and my entire response is two sentenes long: a sentence for each question. But since the questions are almost exactly the same - one is asking for the definition of a term that the autor spells out, and the other is for the author's true meaning of the same term. In fact, I could actually just quote the author and answer both questions in a single sentence as the author does in the book - so I guess I'm being just a nervious nellie.
But, dear god, I have no idea how someone could get a page from this question! My most verbose answer - I've been refinging those two sentenes for a half hour now - was about five sentences long. And that got into where the laws that he thought of were being applied, and where he got those laws from which I don't think is relevent to the question of his definition of the term.
Maybe if I write in on paper it will seem like there's more than there actually is, without padding the paper.
And I'm writting Hobbes' ideas. No, it is not Struker & Whites. But Hobbes's looks silly, and Strukers & Whites does not allow the use of "contact" as a verb, and "call, write, e-mail, or click us" looks siller that Hobbes's.
But, dear god, I have no idea how someone could get a page from this question! My most verbose answer - I've been refinging those two sentenes for a half hour now - was about five sentences long. And that got into where the laws that he thought of were being applied, and where he got those laws from which I don't think is relevent to the question of his definition of the term.
Maybe if I write in on paper it will seem like there's more than there actually is, without padding the paper.
And I'm writting Hobbes' ideas. No, it is not Struker & Whites. But Hobbes's looks silly, and Strukers & Whites does not allow the use of "contact" as a verb, and "call, write, e-mail, or click us" looks siller that Hobbes's.