Skip to main content

Diigo Home

George Orwell's 5 Rules for Effective Writing - The Diigo Meta page

www.pickthebrain.com/...-5-rules-for-effective-writing - Cached

This link has been bookmarked by 70 people . It was first bookmarked on 21 Mar 2007, by ashley.

  • 27 Oct 09
  • 15 Oct 09
  • 02 Sep 09
  • 29 Jul 09
    cummingsl
    Laura Cummings

    Summary of George Orwell's rules for effective writing

    writing rules

  • 10 Jul 09
  • 14 May 09
  • 18 Mar 09
  • 05 Nov 08
    wiredinstructor
    Dennis OConnor

    George Orwell’s 5 Rules for Effective Writing

    language writing word choice 6-traits

  • 13 Jul 08
  • 30 Jun 08
  • 27 May 08
  • 20 Mar 08
  • 17 Mar 08
  • 27 Feb 08
  • 26 Feb 08
  • 12 Feb 08
  • 27 Jan 08
    • Language is the primary conductor between your brain and the minds of your audience. Ineffective language weakens and distorts ideas.


      If you want to be understood, if you want your ideas to spread, using effective language must be your top priority.In the modern world of business and politics this is hardly ever the case. In many instances, imprecise language is used intentionally to avoid taking a position and offending various demographics. No wonder it’s hard to make sense of anything!

    • 1. Never use a metaphor, simile, or other figure of speech which you are used to seeing in print.
    • 2. Never use a long word where a short one will do.
    • 4 more annotations...
  • 09 Jan 08
  • 24 Dec 07
  • 22 Dec 07
  • 08 Dec 07
    fernaco
    Art ist

    If you want to be understood, if you want your ideas to spread, using effective language must be your top priority.In the modern world of business and politics this is hardly ever the case.

    writing

  • 07 Nov 07
    • By following Orwell’s 5 rules for effective writing, you’ll distinguish yourself from competitors and clearly communicate your ideas.


      1. Never use a metaphor, simile, or other figure of speech which you are used to seeing in print.


      This sounds easy, but in practice is incredibly difficult. Phrases such as toe the line, ride roughshod over, stand shoulder to shoulder with, play into the hands of, an axe to grind, Achilles’ heel, swan song, and hotbed come to mind quickly and feel comforting and melodic.


      For this exact reason they must be avoided. Common phrases have become so comfortable that they create no emotional response. Take the time to invent fresh, powerful images.


      2. Never use a long word where a short one will do.


      Long words don’t make you sound intelligent unless used skillfully. In the wrong situation they’ll have the opposite effect, making you sound pretentious and arrogant. They’re also less likely to be understood and more awkward to read.


      When Hemingway was criticized by Faulkner for his limited word choice he replied:


      Poor Faulkner. Does he really think big emotions come from big words? He thinks I don’t know the ten-dollar words. I know them all right. But there are older and simpler and better words, and those are the ones I use.


      3. If it is possible to cut a word out, always cut it out.


      Great literature is simply language charged with meaning to the utmost possible degree (Ezra Pound). Accordingly, any words that don’t contribute meaning to a passage dilute its power. Less is always better. Always.


      4. Never use the passive where you can use the active.


      This one is frequently broken, probably because many people don’t know the difference between active and passive verbs. I didn’t myself until a few months ago. Here is an example that makes it easy to understand:


      The man was bitten by the dog. (passive)The dog bit the man. (active).The active is better because it’s shorter and more forceful.


      5. Never use a foreign phrase, a scientific word, or a jargon word if you can think of an everyday English equivalent.


      This is tricky because much of the writing published on the internet is highly technical. If possible, remain accessible to the average reader. If your audience is highly specialized this is a judgment call. You don’t want to drag on with unnecessary explanation, but try to help people understand what you’re writing about. You want your ideas to spread right?


      6. Break any of these rules sooner than saying anything outright barbarous.


      This bonus rule is a catch all. Above all, be sure to use common sense.These rules are easy to memorize but difficult to apply. Although I’ve edited this piece a dozen times I’m sure it contains imperfections. But trust me, it’s much better now than it was initially. The key is effort. Good writing matters, probably more than you think.


      I hope you find these rules helpful, and through their application we’re able to understand each other a little bit better. If you enjoyed this post, be sure to read Orwell’s original essay. It contains many helpful examples and is, of course, a pleasure to read.

    • I read this essay over 10 years ago. It changed the way I viewed the writing process. Lazy (’foolish’ according to Orwell) thinking if allowed to become lazy writing encourages even lazier thinking.


      I think it was C.S. Lewis who said (echoing Einstein), and I paraphrase: If you can’t explain it to a 12 year old then you have not understood the concept. And how better to know you understand, than to put fingers to keyboard!

    • 7 more annotations...
  • 03 Nov 07
  • 25 Oct 07
  • 07 Sep 07
  • 24 Aug 07
  • 07 Aug 07
  • 11 Jul 07
  • 09 Jul 07
  • 02 Jul 07
  • 21 Jun 07
  • 08 Jun 07
  • 05 Jun 07
  • 02 Jun 07
  • 26 Apr 07
  • 13 Apr 07
  • 22 Mar 07
    xmuskrat
    aubrey alexander

    In our society, the study of language and literature is the domain of poets, novelists, and literary critics. Language is considered a decorative art, fit for entertainment and culture, but practically useless in comparison to the concrete sciences. Just

    writing tips orwell creativity language blog rules howto delicious

  • mr_maher
    Mr Maher

    from the author of 1984

    writing skills

  • 21 Mar 07
  • abditus
    abditus

    If you want to be understood, if you want your ideas to spread, using effective language must be your top priority.
    In the modern world of business and politics this is hardly ever the case. In many instances, imprecise language is used intentionally to a

    Imported Bookmarks

    • If you want to be understood, if you want your ideas to spread, using effective language must be your top priority.

      In the modern world of business and politics this is hardly ever the case. In many instances, imprecise language is used intentionally to avoid taking a position and offending various demographics. No wonder it’s hard to make sense of anything!

      This is hardly a recent problem, and as George Orwell wrote in his 1946 essay, Politics and the English Language, the condition is curable. By following Orwell’s 5 rules for effective writing, you’ll distinguish yourself from competitors and clearly communicate your ideas.