Long Story Short School of Writing
'The tribute to learning is teaching.'
THE NITTY-GRITTY OF GOOD GRAMMAR AND GREAT WRITIING
Instructor:  Francis X. Curry


Do you have difficulty telling  a dangling participle from a sentence fragment?  Do clauses have you baffled?  Would you be unable to diagram a sentence even at gunpoint?  Then this is the class for you. You may be way beyond a beginning writer, while still being unsure of some parts of grammar, which makes your work just good, rather than great.  Learn what your teachers never told you, right here.

Class one

Introduction
An explanation of the basis for the contents

How To Start
Explanation of how to start a written piece.  Explains a plan and how to formulate a plan.  Offers methods of offering ideas to a reader.

Class Two


Class Three


Class Four


Class Five


Class Six


Class Seven


Class Eight


Class Nine


9 rules

1. Adjectives of one syllable add er to form the comparative and add est to form the superlative.
Positive comparative superlative

Strong stronger strongest

2. Adjectives of more than one syllable generally form the comparative by putting more before the positive and most before the superlative.

Some adjectives of more than one syllable may be written either way.

3. Some adjectives are much like irregular verbs. Good    better    best bad   worse   worst little   less   least Much, many, & some use more and most.

4. Most adverbs are formed by adding ly to the adjective.
Adjective adverb

Sad sadly

When comparing adverbs, generally put more before the adverb to form the comparative and most to form the superlative.

Readily more readily most readily

5. When comparing two persons or things, use the comparative.
Jane is the shorter of the two.

6. When comparing three or more persons or things, use the superlative. Jane is the best of them all.  

7. In forming the comparative or the superlative, do not use more and er or most and est for the same word.

Don't write Write

The most saddest sight The saddest sight


8.Trouble !

The adjectives, this, that, these and those, are trouble to some persons, only when they are combined with the words sort, type, kind, and like.  This and that are singular.  These and those are plural.

This kind that kind

These kinds those kinds

9. Look, feel, taste, smell, and hear.

Class Ten

Word usage


Start Date: Every other Wednesday - contact instructor.
Duration 10 weeks.
Limit  N/A 
Class Materials Instructor will provide. 
Tuition: $125
Private Mentoring Option  $35
Contact Francis.



Register by Check.
Francis X. Curry has written three books - all published by Infinity Publishing of West Conshohocken, Pennsylvania.  He learned his basic writing skills at Gonzaga University, Spokane Washington.
Get Course in eBook format - $22.95