Writing

In the creative arts and scientific literature, an acknowledgment (also spelled acknowledgement) is an expression of gratitude for assistance in creating a literary or artistic work. ...more on Wikipedia about "Acknowledgment (creative arts)"

Adoxography is a word meaning "the waste of excellence in writing on a subject not worthy of it." ...more on Wikipedia about "Adoxography"

An alphabet is a complete standardized set of letters — basic written symbols — each of which roughly represents a phoneme of a spoken language, either as it exists now or as it may have been in the past. There are other systems of writing such as logograms, in which each symbol represents a morpheme, or word, and syllabaries, in which each symbol represents a syllable. ...more on Wikipedia about "Alphabet"

Amateur writing is writing done by unknown or unpublished authors. It is often self-published or not published at all. ...more on Wikipedia about "Amateur writing"

Annotation is extra information associated with a particular point in a document or other piece of information. ...more on Wikipedia about "Annotation"

An artificial or constructed script (also conscript or neography) is a new writing system specifically created by an individual or group, rather than having evolved as part of a culture like a natural script. They are often designed for use with conlangs, although several of them are used in linguistic experimentation or for other more practical ends. Some, such as the Shavian alphabet, Alphabet 26, and the Deseret alphabet, were devised as English spelling reforms. Others, including Alexander Melville Bell's Visible Speech and John Malone's Unifon were developed for pedagogical use. Blissymbols were developed as a written international auxiliary language. Shorthand systems may be considered conscripts. ...more on Wikipedia about "Artificial script"

An autograph is a document written entirely in the handwriting of its author, as opposed to a typeset document or one transcribed by an amanuensis or a copyist; the meaning overlaps with that of the word holograph. As the word is used by non-historians, it has come to mean a person's signature. This term is used in particular for the practice of collecting autographs of celebrities. ...more on Wikipedia about "Autograph"

The block quote is a method of formatting a direct quotation within a writen document in which the quoted material is visually differentiated from the surrounding original material through the use of indentation. Generally speaking, a block quote is used when cited text is four or more lines in length. Compared with an in-line direct quote (that is, a quotation contained within the current paragraph structure), the block quote differs in two significant ways: ...more on Wikipedia about "Block quote"

A calligram is a poem (though can also be a phrase or single word) in which the typeface or handwriting forms an important part of the focus. Guillaume Apollinaire is a famous calligram writer. ...more on Wikipedia about "Calligram"

For any word written in a language with whose alphabet or alphabet equivalent has two cases, such as those using the Latin, Greek, Cyrillic, or Armenian alphabet, capitalization (or capitalisation) is the writing of that word with its first letter in majuscules (uppercase) and the remaining letters in minuscules (lowercase). Such words may also be said to be in title case, since traditionally most words in titles of books, films, etc. are capitalized. In Unicode, a few letters have a title case form, where the Unicode character is different depending on whether the whole word is in uppercase or just the initial letter: see Croatian and polytonic Greek below. ...more on Wikipedia about "Capitalization"

Chinese characters or Han characters ( ) are logograms used in the written forms of the Chinese language, and to varying degrees in the Japanese and Korean. Use of Chinese characters has disappeared from the Vietnamese language — where they were used until the 20th century — and from Korea, where they have been completely replaced by Hangul in normal writing. ...more on Wikipedia about "Chinese character"

* "Chunking the Content" - Writing for the Web: Guidelines for MIT Libraries accessed December 9, 2005 ...more on Wikipedia about "Chunking (writing)"

Codicology is the study of a codex, an older handwritten book. It is closely related to palaeography, the study of handwriting in older manuscripts, and to philology, the study of language and culture in older texts. All three originated in Classical Latin and Greek studies, but later extended to the Medieval studies, and then to manuscripts and books from other pre-modern cultures and time periods. ...more on Wikipedia about "Codicology"

Copperplate refers to the use of inscribed sheets of copper in printing. The etched sheets of copper are inked and then have paper rolled over them to produce a copy. ...more on Wikipedia about "Copperplate" Things Go Better with http://www.shortopedia.com.

Creative writing is a term used to distinguish certain imaginative or different types of writing from generic writing. The lack of specificity of the term is partly intentional, designed to make the process of writing accessible to everyone (of all ages) and to ensure that non-traditional, or traditionally low-status writing (for example, writing by marginalized social groups, experimental writing, genre fiction) is not excluded from academic consideration or dismissed as trivial or insignificant. This distinction is helpful in separating the writing from more technical writing, professional writing or journalistic writing. ...more on Wikipedia about "Creative writing"

:For other uses of the term credit, see the Credit disambiguation page. ...more on Wikipedia about "Credit (creative arts)"

Cursive is any style of handwriting in which all the letters in a word are connected, making a word one single (complicated) stroke. In British English, the phrase "joined-up writing" is far more commonly used, while the term "running writing" is sometimes used in Australia. Cursive is considered distinct from the so-called "printing" or "block letter" style of handwriting, in which the letters of a word are unconnected, and from "print-writing", which is a cross between cursive and printing, with some unconnected letters and some connected. ...more on Wikipedia about "Cursive"

D'Nealian is a style of writing and teaching cursive and print (block) handwriting for English (and perhaps other languages written with the Latin alphabet). It was designed to ease the learning of cursive and print handwriting. It was developed by Donald Thurber, who developed the system while teaching in a primary school. It is reported that D'Nealian cursive handwriting, when it is taught to children, is easier to learn and that students more quickly and easily acquire the skill with less frustration than traditional cursive writing systems. It is being taught in some schools for these reasons. ...more on Wikipedia about "D'Nealian"

A defective script is a script that does not represent all the phonemic distinctions of a language. ...more on Wikipedia about "Defective script"

Dialogue in fiction is conversation between two characters or among a group of characters. It can also be a character talking with himself in his mind; this is known as interior monologue. ...more on Wikipedia about "Dialogue (fiction)"

Diplomatics is forensic palaeography. ...more on Wikipedia about "Diplomatics" Stay cool with http://www.shortopedia.com. shortopedia

Distributive writing is the collective authorship of texts. ...more on Wikipedia about "Distributive writing"

Fiction writing consists of fashioning works of prose based on the imagination that could possibly be published in literary form. The end result may be a short story, novel, screenplay, or drama. ...more on Wikipedia about "Fiction writing"

A ghostwriter is a writer who writes under someone else's name, with their consent. Ghostwriters are often employed by celebrities to write autobiographies in situations in which the celebrities themselves may not be talented writers, or are too busy doing other work. ...more on Wikipedia about "Ghostwriter"

Graphology is the study of handwriting and its connection to behavior, and related data points. Critics cite the lack of supporting empirical evidence as a reason to not use it. Supporters point to the anecdotal evidence of thousands of positive testimonials, as a reason to use it. ...more on Wikipedia about "Graphology" This text is made for http://www.shortopedia.com Writing

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