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Plain English

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Plain English focuses on being a flexible and efficient writing style that readers can understand in one reading. It uses only as many words as are necessary. It combines

It tries to avoid obscurity, inflated vocabulary, and convoluted sentences. Proponents say that plain English lets readers concentrate on the message instead of complicated language.

History

Before the 20th century, it was fashionable for English-language writers to use a very bloated, rambling style. A sentence could take up half a page, with its subordinate clauses following several tangents. In some other European languages, such as German, sentences that were even more extensive were also frequent; the philosopher G. W. F. Hegel was known for writing sentences that easily occupied three pages.

It is not clear where this tradition came from, but it may have originated with classical Latin, in which such prose was perfectly acceptable.

Important Influences

In the late 19th century, several gifted writers (e.g., Abraham Lincoln) demonstrated that plain English could be elegant when executed properly (e.g., the Gettysburg Address); but they were ahead of their time.

During the 1920s, such style guides as William Strunk Jr.'s The Elements of Style actively promoted the idea of writing in plain English. However, it would take over fifty years for Strunk's ideas to become widely accepted.

George Orwell wrote an important essay on the subject in 1946, entitled Politics and the English Language.

The plain English revolution finally penetrated the fields of law and government during the 1970s, as shown by the passage of the [Paperwork Reduction Act] of 1976, and the popularity of books like Plain English for Lawyers (1979).

See also

References

External links


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