1 / 73

Scientific Communication CITS7200

Scientific Communication CITS7200. Lecture 2 General Writing Skills in English. Ambiguous sentences Dangling participles Distinctions Redundant terms Oxymorons Punctuation. Active voice What to call yourself Adjective and adverb use Sentence starters. Avoiding ambiguity.

bloden
Télécharger la présentation

Scientific Communication CITS7200

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Scientific Communication CITS7200 Lecture 2 General Writing Skills in English

  2. Ambiguous sentences • Dangling participles • Distinctions • Redundant terms • Oxymorons • Punctuation

  3. Active voice • What to call yourself • Adjective and adverb use • Sentence starters

  4. Avoiding ambiguity • Smith remarked in a paper about the ambiguity of data. • In the study of robotics, vision and artificial intelligence are dealtwith at length. • The compiler did not accept the program because it contained errors.

  5. From the Subiaco Post • Balga residents fed up with criminal activity in their suburb have supplied the addresses and car registration numbers of people they claim are buying and selling illicit drugs to the Stirling council and police.

  6. Dangling Participles • A participle is a verbal adjective qualifying a noun, but retaining some of the properties of the verb. Referring to your email, I write to inform you that …

  7. The rule is that the agent must match the action

  8. Substituting (a) into (b), the algorithm simplifies as follows: • When deriving parallel algorithms, the model of computation must becarefully considered. • Having decided to navigate the robot using stereo vision, the questionwill be...

  9. Distinctions • Alternate and Alternative Alternate two Alternative many

  10. Of the many alternatives available for implementing this algorithm, one involves alternating between the minimum and maximum values in the search.

  11. Compare with, compare to “Compare with” is technical “Compare to” is poetic

  12. Shall I compare thee to a summer's day? • Compared with an English summer, an Australian winter merely has shorter days.

  13. Compose, comprise, constitute Compose = to make up Comprise = to consist of Constitute used in reverse sense

  14. This course is composed of 13 lectures. • This course comprises 13 lectures. • Thirteen lectures constitute this course. You cannot say: This course is comprised of 13 lectures.

  15. Comprise refers to the whole content • Include refers to items in content The alias year4 includes the honours students, but comprises all fourth year students in the department.

  16. Less, fewer Less refers to a quantity – analog Fewer refers to a number – discrete

  17. There are fewer oranges than apples, although the apples are less tasty. • There are less than five algorithms currently available for optimising this sort of variable.

  18. More music, less talk • More songs, fewer ads

  19. Generally, fewer goes with plural words but not always. • That hamburger costs less than five dollars. • Hand me fewer than five dollars.

  20. Related concept with “amount” and “number” • The amount of water in the test tube is small; the number of molecules is huge. • I conducted a large amount of experiments.

  21. That, which That defines and restricts Which informs and does not restrict

  22. Consider the lattice L, which is complete. • Consider the lattice L that is complete.

  23. The car that is speeding down the road is about to crash into a stuffed piglet. • The car, which is speeding down the road, is about to crash into a stuffed piglet. Which car is about to crash?

  24. In general, which-clauses are set off by commas. The which always refers to whatever happens to be sitting in front of the comma preceding the which.

  25. Richard argued with the lamp, which was foolish. • Richard argued with the lamp, which behaviour was foolish. • Richard argued with the lamp; such is the habit of fools under stress.

  26. Redundant terms • Max’s response was to remain inarticulately mute; he had no desire to be assaulted, assailed, or attacked. • Lyn decided that the home in which they were living was turning into a crazy madhouse.

  27. Oxymorons • Richard told his boss that he needed a massive vacuum in which to run his experiment. • The party was a resoundingly successful failure. • The smart bomb exploded without reason.

  28. Punctuation • A comma is a punctuation mark of the least separation indicated between parts of a sentence. • A semi-colon is used as the chief stop of intermediate value between a comma and a full-stop. It separates two or more related clauses.

  29. A colon is a punctuation mark ranking between a semi-colon and a full-stop. The phrase before a colon is general; the phrase after it is particular. A colon is used especially to mark antithesis, illustration, or quotation.

  30. A full-stop marks the end of a complete sentence, containing a subject, object and finite verb. • A new paragraph generally marks a change of subject.

  31. Commas RULE: When the subject is the same for both clauses in a sentence, and the subject is expressed only once, then no comma is needed.

  32. ...the computation times were measured and recorded. • Knuth's writings are entertaining and full of interesting examples.

  33. RULE: When the subject is the same for both clauses and is expressed only once, a comma is useful when the connective is but.

  34. Knuth's writings are entertaining, but are lacking in interesting examples.

  35. RULE: When the subject is expressed once more, use a comma before a connecting and and but.

  36. Knuth's writings are entertaining, and they are full of interesting examples.

  37. RULE: Place a comma before a conjunction, introducing an independent clause.

  38. The network modelled the behaviour of the brain and the digestive  system was completely ignored. • Each node sums the inputs and outputs a ‘1’ if the sum is positive.

  39. The early data have disappeared, and it is no longer easy to reconstructthe results. • The computation is complex, but there is a possible simplificationif 1 is replaced throughout by sin2(x) + cos2(x).

  40. RULE: In a series of three or more items with a single conjunction, use a comma after each item except the last. This is called a serial comma or the Oxford comma.

  41. Red, white, and blue are the colours of the French flag. • The textures determined in this image are wood, salt and pepper, and Hessian. • Work done independently by Jones, Lee and Tsui, and Forkaras [18,22,3] demonstrates that this problem is NP-complete.

  42. RULE: Enclose parenthetic expressions between commas.

  43. The best way to use this computer, unless you are playing games, is with keyboard data entry.

  44. RULE: Do not break sentences in two, using full-stops where commas should be used.

  45. Knuth is an entertaining writer. A man with a wonderful repertoireof examples.

  46. RULE: Do not join independent clauses by a comma when each clause is grammatically complete. Use a semi-colon where you could just as well use a full-stop.

  47. Knuth's writings are entertaining; they are full of interesting examples.

  48. RULE: If a list contains commas within the items, use semi-colons as the list separator.

  49. The data include binary, floating, and complex images; integers and reals; and arrays of images.

  50. RULE: Use a colon after an independent clause to introduce a list of particulars, an antithesis, an illustration, or a quotation. That is, use a colon at the end of a sentence to indicate that further explanation follows.

More Related