In this age of rapid communication,we all need to write fluent and accurate English,but getting it right can seem daunting。This reassuring guide explains how you can increase your word power and make your language work for you。It tells you how to choose the right style for your。It tells you how to choose the right style for your audience。avoid hackneyed expressions and find ways of brightening up your writing。The glossaries tables and‘hitlist’。of awkward words and phrases will help you find solutions to problems quickly and easily。
It's that bruiser of a term paper. Or maybe you're facing the writing tests on a college or grad school admissions exam and the personal essay for the school you really want to attend. Or it could be those business proposals for your boss. Whatever your writing needs, you know the importance of communicating with clarity and persuasiveness. This book provides the essential writing workshop that shows you that powerful writing is a process that can be learned -- step by step.
Macroeconomics is the most exciting neweconomics textbook in a generation. Charles Jones distillsmodern macroeconomics as it is currently practiced—producing thefirst text to cover modern growth theory at the undergraduatelevel. The author's unique abilities as a teacher and writer renderthis modern treatment of economic theory an easy read for studentsnew to the field. Together with a distinctive focus on problemsolving, this clearly written text brilliantly matchesaccessibility with cutting-edge theory.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the Publisher. Earlier editions ~ I959, 1975 by MacmilLan Publishing Co., Inc. The Introduction originally appeared, in slightly different form, in The Nero Yorker, and was copyrighted in 1957 by The New Yorker Magazine, Inc. The Elements of Style, Rev/sed Edition, by William .Strunk Jr. and Edward A. Tenney, copyright 1935 by Oliver Strunk.