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''The Elements of Style'', 2000 edition.
'''The Elements of Style''' ("'Strunk & White'") is an
American English writing style guide. It is one of the most influential and best-known
prescriptive treatments of English grammar and usage in the
United States. It originally detailed eight elementary rules of usage, ten elementary principles of composition, "a few matters of form," and a list of commonly misused words and expressions. Updated
editions of the paperback book are often required reading for American
high school and
college composition classes.
History
The book was originally written in 1918 and privately
published by
Cornell University professor
William Strunk Jr., and was first revised with the help of
Edward A. Tenny in 1935. In 1957, it came to the attention of
E. B. White at ''
The New Yorker''. White had studied under Strunk in 1919 but had since forgotten the "little book," a "forty-three-page summation of the case for cleanliness, accuracy, and brevity in the use of English." A few weeks later, White wrote a piece for ''The New Yorker'' lauding Professor Strunk and his devotion to "lucid" English prose. Because the book's original author had died in
1946,
Macmillan and Company commissioned White to recast a new edition of ''Elements of Style'', which was published in 1959. In this revision, White independently expanded and modernized the 1918 work and created "'Strunk & White'." White's first edition sold some two million copies, and the first three editions totaled ten million over a span of four decades.
Strunk's original version concentrated on specific questions of usage, cultivating what he considered good
writing and avoiding : ''"Make every word tell."'' White updated and extended these sections, and prefixed an introductory
essay adapted from his ''New Yorker'' article. He also added the concluding chapter, ''An Approach to Style'', a broader prescriptive guide to writing in
English. White updated two more editions of ''The Elements of Style'' in 1972 and 1979, when it grew to 85 pages. By the time the fourth edition of "Strunk and White" appeared in 1999, its second author had died, and the manuscript rights were acquired by
Longman, who added a foreword by White's stepson,
Roger Angell, an afterword by
Charles Osgood, a glossary, and an index. An anonymous editor modified the text of this 1999 edition. Among other changes, he or she removed White's spirited defense of "he" for nouns embracing both genders. See the "they" entry in Chapter IV and also
gender-specific pronouns.
The year 2005 saw the release of ''The Elements of Style Illustrated'', with design and illustrations by
Maira Kalman. The text follows the 1999 edition. ISBN 1-59420-069-6
Content
The rules themselves can be listed quite easily, though much of the value of the text is not only in the rules themselves but in Strunk and White's explanations and their copious (and humorous) examples.
I. Elementary rules of usage
#
Form the possessive singular of nouns with 's.
#In a series of three or more terms with a single
conjunction, use a comma after each term except the last. (See
serial comma.)
#Enclose
parenthetic expressions between commas.
#Place a comma before 'and' or 'but' introducing an
independent clause.
#Do not join
independent clauses with a comma. (See
comma splice.)
#Do not break sentences in two.
#A
participial phrase at the beginning of a sentence must refer to the
grammatical subject.
#
Divide words at line-ends in accordance with their formation and pronunciation.
II. Elementary principles of composition
- Make the paragraph the unit of composition: one paragraph to each topic.
- As a rule, begin each paragraph with a topic sentence; end it in conformity with the beginning.
- Use the active voice.
- Put statements in positive form.
- Omit needless words.
- Avoid a succession of loose sentences.
- Express co-ordinate ideas in similar form.
- Keep related words together.
- In summaries, keep to one tense.
- Place the emphatic words of a sentence at the end.
III. A Few Matters of Form
Addresses colloquialisms, exclamations, headings, the hyphen, margins, numerals, parentheses, quotations, references, syllabication, and titles.
IV. Words and Expressions Commonly Misused
Includes aggravate, irritate; all right; allude; allusion; alternate, alternative; among, between; and/or; anticipate; anybody; anyone; as good or better than; as to whether; as yet; being; but; can; care less; case; certainly; character; claim (verb); clever; compare; comprise; consider; contact; cope; currently; data; different from; disinterested; divided into; due to; each and every one; effect; enormity; enthuse; etc.; fact; facility; factor; farther, further; feature; finalize; fix; flammable; folk; fortuitous; get; gratuitous; he is a man who; hopefully; however; illusion; imply, infer; importantly; in regard to; in the last analysis; inside of, inside; insightful; in terms of; interesting; irregardless; -ize; kind of; lay vs lie; leave; less; like; line, along these lines; literal, literally; loan vs lend; meaningful; memento; most; nature; nauseous, nauseated; nice; nor; noun used as a verb; offputting, ongoing; one; one of the most; -oriented; partially; participle for verbal noun; people; personalize; personally; possess; presently; prestigious; refer; regretful; relate; respective, respectively; secondly, thirdly, etc.; shall, will; so; sort of; split infinitive; state; student body; than; thanking you in advance;
that, which; the foreseeable future; the truth is, the fact is; they, he or she; this; thrust; tortuous, torturous; transpire; try; type; unique; utilize; verbal; very; while; -wise; worthwhile; and would.
V. An Approach to Style (With a List of Reminders)
# Place yourself in the background.
# Write in a way that comes naturally.
# Work from a suitable design.
# Write with nouns and verbs.
# Revise and rewrite.
# Do not overwrite.
# Do not overstate.
# Avoid the use of qualifiers.
# Do not affect a breezy manner.
# Use orthodox spelling.
# Do not explain too much.
# Do not construct awkward adverbs.
# Make sure the reader knows who is speaking.
# Avoid fancy words.
# Do not use dialect unless your ear is good.
# Be clear.
# Do not inject opinion.
# Use figures of speech sparingly.
# Do not take shortcuts at the cost of clarity.
# Avoid foreign languages.
# Prefer the standard to the offbeat.
See also
★
Prescription and description
★ ''
Fowler's Modern English Usage''
★ ''
Plain Words''
★
Style guide
Editions in print
★ Hardcover 4th edition, (1999), ISBN 0-205-31342-6
★ Paperback 4th edition, (2000), ISBN 0-205-30902-X
★ ''The Elements of Style: A Style Guide for Writers'' by William Strunk, (2005), ISBN 0-97522-980-X
★ ''The Elements of Style Illustrated'' by William Strunk Jr., E.B. White and Maira Kalman (Illustrator), (2005), ISBN 1-59420-069-6
★ ''The Elements of Style by William Strunk Jr. & How To Speak And Write Correctly by Joseph Devlin'', (2006), BN Publishing, ISBN 956-291-263-9
External links
★
''The Elements of Style'': Full text of Strunk's 1918 edition (visited
January 11 2007)
★
''The Elements of Style'': Full text of Strunk's 1918 edition (visited
January 11 2007)
★
Full text of the updated E.B. White version: visual effects not as good as in web-editions of Strunk's 1918 edition
★
Full text of the updated E.B. White version - zipped, ready for download: visual effects not as good as in web-editions of Strunk's 1918 edition
★
''The Elements of Style'' as an operatic play
★
NPR radio piece discussing illustrated ''Strunk & White'' book and musical adaptation.