Are there rules in writing?

Philippines
January 24, 2007 4:33am CST
My profession is not really in writing but sometimes my work requires me to prepare speeches, articles and if I am in the mood, I can write some minor literary pieces just to express myself. Are there really fast and hard rules in writing?
4 responses
@peavey (16936)
• United States
24 Jan 07
Hard and fast rules: 1. Use a spell checker 2. Double check your grammar 3. Don't use people who love you for editors or feedback 4. Write, write, write 5. Let your material cool for a few days, then reread it to see if it makes sense 6. Edit your material mercilessly and cold heartedly 7. Have something to say (probably should be in #1 position)
@peavey (16936)
• United States
24 Jan 07
I'm thinking maybe you were asking a different question. "Hard and fast rules" may be better answered this way: Write what you love. Express yourself any way you like, but if you want to write for publication, you have to write what people want to read. That can be different things for different audiences. That's the only real rule for publication: Write what people want to read.
• Philippines
26 Jan 07
Thank you. Those are helpful guidelines in writing. I appreciate your inputs. God bless!
@Wanderlaugh (1622)
• Australia
24 Jan 07
One basic rule. "Be worth reading". That applies to writers, too. We have to read whatever horror we come up with and either try to make it work, or try and hide. Speeches can be murder, and any article has to stand on its own. Literary pieces are a little different because the range of expression isn't as confined. However, the basic rule always applies. Read anything you write back to yourself, and consider if it works. Self criticism can save you a lot of external criticism. Creative writing tends to set standards. After a while you'll see what isn't good enough. Just remember that one rule.
• Philippines
26 Jan 07
Thank you for the response. I will remember your advice. :-)
@alvinia1 (714)
• Romania
24 Jan 07
To join two independent clauses, use a comma followed by a conjunction, a semicolon alone, or a semicolon followed by a sentence modifier. Use commas to bracket nonrestrictive phrases, which are not essential to the sentence's meaning.
@mipen2006 (5528)
• Australia
26 Jan 07
If you want to write good academic literature, speeches, short stories, or even a novel there are hard and fast rules. Not only grammar rules, but rules on how your article should be constructed. You should search esl writing, there are many web sites you can use to get started. Good luck!