Published on
March 15, 2019
by
Shane Bryson.
Revised on
April 24, 2020.
The goal of using headings in a document is not only to divide information, but also to allow easy navigation of the document. In academic writing, headings help readers find the specific information they want while retaining a sense of how that information fits with everything else in the document.
To test for overall heading clarity, ask yourself the following: from reading your headings in sequence, would an informed reader understand…
- The content of the document as a whole?
- The specific content of each section?
- How each section fits with the others?
If not, your headings need some improvement.
Continue reading: How to write effective headings
Published on
April 28, 2015
by
Shane Bryson.
Revised on
October 10, 2022.
Sentence structure determines how the different parts of a sentence are put together, from its punctuation to the ordering of its words. As well as following basic word order rules, there are many other things you have to consider to write correctly and clearly structured sentences.
There are two especially common sentence construction mistakes:
- Run-on sentences: incorrect punctuation used to join different parts of a sentence
- Sentence fragments: missing necessary components to form a full grammatically correct sentence
Sentence structure is not just a matter of grammar, but also of style and flow. Strong academic writing uses a variety of sentence lengths and structures. It’s important to avoid overly long sentences that can be confusing for readers, but too many very short sentences can make your text feel choppy and disjointed. If you struggle with this, you could consider a proofreading and editing service.
Continue reading: How to Improve Your Sentence Structure | Avoid Common Errors
Published on
April 23, 2015
by
Shane Bryson.
Revised on
September 1, 2022.
The following is a list of commonly deployed phrasal verbs that find one use or another in academic texts. These (and others) can be acceptably used in academic texts. Along with these examples, however, are a number of one-word substitutions to illustrate that in each case the phrasal verb can be easily replaced.
Continue reading: List of 47 Phrasal Verbs and Their One-Word Substitutions
Published on
April 23, 2015
by
Shane Bryson.
Revised on
October 10, 2022.
A phrasal verb combines two or more words to describe a specific action. Phrasal verbs can be difficult to get right, as their meaning usually has nothing to do with the definitions of the component words.
This means that phrasal verbs must be treated as distinct pieces of vocabulary. You have to learn them as a single unit of meaning, just like you would learn any single word.
Phrasal verbs are very common in everyday speech, but in academic writing, it’s best to replace them with one-word alternatives where possible.
47 phrasal verbs and one-word alternatives
Continue reading: Phrasal Verbs | List, Definition, Examples & Tips
Published on
April 21, 2015
by
Shane Bryson.
Revised on
April 3, 2018.
The examples in the article Word Order Rules in English outline all of the sentence positions in their most common ordering, except for one final kind of sentence position: the adverbial.
Adverbials are words or phrases that provide the information typically provided by adverbs:
Continue reading: Word Order Rules: Adverbials
Published on
April 21, 2015
by
Shane Bryson.
Revised on
September 1, 2022.
In theory, English sentences take a simple form much of the time. The basic rules for which words appear in a sentence can help you with most of the sentences you’ll need in academic writing.
If we push on these rules, we’ll find many exceptions, but the point here is only to provide a kind of template that can be followed much of the time.
Continue reading: Word Order Rules in English
Published on
April 14, 2015
by
Shane Bryson.
Revised on
October 10, 2022.
Parentheses are used to add extra information in a sentence. In academic writing, they are most often used to convey technical information such as equations, to introduce acronyms, and for parenthetical citations.
Continue reading: Parentheses () | Definition, Punctuation, Rules & Examples
Published on
April 9, 2015
by
Shane Bryson.
Revised on
March 27, 2017.
Even rarer than question marks, exclamation points are almost never used in academic or formal writing. They owe their rarity in academic writing to the spirit of dispassionate discussion that formal writing usually requires.
The excitability communicated by an exclamation disqualifies the exclamation mark from acceptable use.
Continue reading: Exclamation points (!)
Published on
April 9, 2015
by
Shane Bryson.
Revised on
October 10, 2022.
Considering the numbers of questions we try to answer in academics, we use question marks infrequently. You might use them to state your research question, to clarify an issue that requires future research, or once in a while to pose a question for your reader to consider as you proceed with your discussion.
Continue reading: Question Marks (?) | Rules, Use & Examples
Published on
April 9, 2015
by
Shane Bryson.
Revised on
August 23, 2022.
Punctuation signals the structure of a text, telling us not only where one idea ends and another begins, but also which idea is more important and how it relates to other ideas. The wrong punctuation, then, signals the wrong relationship between ideas, confusing your reader.
Continue reading: Punctuation in Academic Writing: Common Errors | Examples