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by mopierotti
166 days ago
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It's clever that the the author provides both his essay and an example at the same time! Sorry, that joke felt obligatory. Miscellaneous reactions, in an elegant bulleted list: - "Simple" sentences are certainly expressive, but "elegant" wording expands the set of meanings that can be conveyed. And vice-versa - I think a lot of the meat of a sentence is conveyed in the connotations of words and not their literal meaning. "Simple" wording is necessarily more common, and therefore will necessarily have a less specific or reliable connotation. This is a blessing and a curse. - More subjectively, I think ideal writing is also a window into the author's experience of the world (or moreso whatever topic they're writing about), and as a reader, I want that to come through in an authentic way that matches the author's experience. So, using a thesaurus and agonizing over sentence structure might end up 'elegant' but still vaguely bad, but on the other hand if you agonize over a sentence and come up with something more "sophisticated" that ultimately rings truer to you, then go for it. - ^ The above points aren't direct rebuttals to TFA, but I think they relate to why elegance can be appealing. |
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