No! Another darling lost. That. I love That. You can’t have my That’s. No!
*sigh* I suppose I’ll go back and hack away. After I write 2000 words, first.
Chris The Story Reading Ape's Blog
Originally posted as the Dun Writin’—Now Whut? series on this blog, EDITING 101 is a weekly refresher series for some of you and brand new for others.
Courtesy of Adirondack Editing
THAT’s the Problem in Revising
“What’s the problem?”
“That’s the problem.”
“What?”
“That.”
“I don’t get it.”
“That’s the problem.”
Sound like the old “Who’s on first” routine? Extraneous words that make a writer’s work bulky need to be eliminated. But how can you eliminate words that you don’t even see? That’s the problem, and that is one of those words that can usually be cut. Dialogue that is casual regularly contains many incidences of that word, but when it comes to writing, that can usually be deleted.
Are you still confused? If a sentence is understandable without “that” in it, take it out.
Example: “She told him that she was leaving” reads just fine…
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Many thanks for re-blogging Matt 👍😃
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Thanks for being faithful and posting so much good, Chris. Your blog is entertaining and helpful.
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Glad to hear it Matt 😃
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