FLC Writing Program / Writing Conventions
Williams’ Emphasis
In Style: Lessons in Clarity and Grace, Joseph Williams identifies several strategies for putting “the right emphasis on the right words.”
- Move technical terms to end of sentences (It is especially important to locate new terms well in your sentences and not overwhelm readers with too many new ideas.)
- Avoid too much metadiscourse (“I think that,”“perhaps,”“certainly”) and blueprinting (“In the next few sections, I am going to say”)
- Use psychological not grammatical subjects (not just topic or “doer” of action but logical character) and terms that will help readers understand your point
- Stress the most emphatic part of the sentence (usually occurring at the end)
3 simple strategies
- Trim the end of your sentence (especially condensing sprawled out prepositional phrases)
- Shift peripheral ideas to the left
- Shift new information to the right
6 ways to emphasize concepts
- Passive (flip subject and object) (“Our children will breathe better air” to Better air will be available to our children”)
- “There are” at the beginning of a paragraph (“There are several actions citizens can take”; “There are several actions that can be taken by citizens”)
- “what” shift (“Change is what we really need” to “What we really need is change”)
- “It” shift (Clean air is important for our children” to “It is so important to have clean air for our children”)
- Not only….but also
- Avoid repetition; pronouns emphasize previous word (“Clean air is important for our children” to “It is something we owe them.’)
Emphasizing ideas in paragraphs
- Topic sentences should include the most important idea in your paragraph (toward the end of the sentence)
- Following sentences should repeat the main idea in different subjects
- Subsequent verbs, nouns and adjectives should repeat them.
For example, take the following sentence: A new political philosophy that could affect our society well into the twenty-first century may emerge from these studies.“[T]hese studies” seems like old information that should be at the beginning and “well into the twenty-first century” seems like the most important information—the new that should be at the end. So, I rewrite this sentence like this: These studies may produce a new political philosophy that could affect our society well into the 21st century.