Subject: Neat
Author:
Posted on: 2012-02-01 23:25:00 UTC
We never got to do those extremely long sentences in my English classes, but it would've been awesome if we did. That looks like great fun.
Subject: Neat
Author:
Posted on: 2012-02-01 23:25:00 UTC
We never got to do those extremely long sentences in my English classes, but it would've been awesome if we did. That looks like great fun.
We never got to do those extremely long sentences in my English classes, but it would've been awesome if we did. That looks like great fun.
There is no law that says you can't write 200+ word sentences outside of English class.
(But I get the idea...)
I'd hate to read it out loud, though. That would take some serious lung capacity.
It also might be funny to send the agents to a fic in the middle of a heavy thunderstorm. "You want a shower? Here, have all the shower you can handle, and a little extra!"
I did consider sending them off to an underwater place without scuba equipment, but then decided that was a bit too much. Don't worry, the Sahara is perfectly horrible enough, as it will cause the mud to cake on everything and then turn into dusty stuff. I think.
This is reminding me of the narration in Thomas Mann's The Magic Mountain. It's quite clever how you hinted at what the PPC does without coming out and hitting the reader over the head with it.
I'm curious: Why did your teacher ask your class to write such a long sentence when this style of writing isn't really accepted anymore?
My teacher is having us write a "multi-media" paper, which employs over 8 different types of writing. It appears that the odder the method of writing, the better.
So maybe if we have an Escher room or a ee cummings room, I'll be dropping in...
I can not begin to describe how lucky you are if your English teacher assigns this sort of material. Today, our class read selections from the Elements of Style. AGAIN.
I actually like that book. By someone-or-other White, yes?
However, I see that if you've already read the book, re-reading it out loud could become tedious.
our teacher sees the book as a religious text rather than a set of guidelines. I have had a stylistically solid sentence graded down because it violated a rule laid out in the book. There are exceptions to EVERYTHING in the Elements. To make it worse, some rules are contradictory, so you just have to guess which rule she likes rather than apply the rules situationally.
Sounds ... difficult.
I really like writing. SOMEHOW, this teacher managed the impossible: She took one of my favorite pastimes and sucked all the joy out of it. Writing is all about experimentation and variety, not following a rote formula. It's just... arg. You don't want to hear me rant.
This reminds me of something from one of the Discworld Books (I'm pretty sure it's The Thief of Time) in which one of the characters says that maybe "Rules exist so you think before breaking them."
Well, I laughed. It's strange how such long, long sentences only seem to turn up either a) in bad writing or b) in high-school and college literature.
I just find it hard to parse, I guess. I'd rather have it broken up so I don't need to keep track of a hundred half-finished thoughts.
(Don't mind me, just testing something)
-Dann
I'm sorry. I'm perfectly aware that long sentences don't always pop up in those two contexts, and I understand that I was making a very, very broad generalization. At the time I was thinking both of the Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest, and of some really good books I've read in class which happened to include long sentences. I was attempting a joke, which proves once again that my sense of humor doesn't translate well at all from my head to my keyboard. In the future, I'll try to clarify things a little more.
It also had the added benefit of showing us all what JulyFlame's berserk button is.
I really am. This was pretty obviously an attack on both you and July, and I'm really sorry for not checking before going after you for it.
(Also more than a mite furious at whoever not only went after July under a proxy, but used someone's name to do it, knowing the response this would get.)
I didn't think July would call someone close-minded. *whew*
But a troll of that much... thoughtfulness? It scares me.
I'll try to pay better attention in the future.
I'm sorry July, I spoke without thinking.
Also it sucks that we have an imposter.
Not unless she changed her IP address within about four hours of her last post.
Also supporting the "It's not Aster" theory is that someone showed up on the IRC around the same time using my name, while i was already online. Possibly same person.
That was a very...vivid description. Whew.
I'm pretty sure.
... this is weird.
It was in reply to my post there.