Download Scientific English: A Guide for Scientists and Other by Robert A. Day PDF

By Robert A. Day

English is frequently considered as probably the most tricky languages to grasp. but whereas the English language has a vocabulary of upwards of 500,000 phrases, it purely makes use of 9 elements of speech, and all of those phrases fall into one (or extra) of these 9 different types. clinical English: A advisor for Scientists and different execs, 3rd Edition comprises many straightforward revelations like this that make powerful medical writing in English effortless, even for these whose fluency is in one other language.

The ebook is prepared round a uncomplicated consultant to English grammar that's particularly adapted to the desires of scientists, technology writers, technological know-how educators, and technological know-how scholars. The authors clarify the targets of medical writing, the position of favor, and a few of the types of writing within the sciences, then offer a simple consultant to the basics of English and tackle troublesome areas corresponding to redundancies, abbreviations and acronyms, jargon, and overseas phrases. electronic mail, on-line publishing, blogs, and writing for the net are lined to boot. This e-book is designed to be an enlightening and unique learn that may then be retained as a pragmatic medical writing reference guide.

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Extra info for Scientific English: A Guide for Scientists and Other Professionals

Sample text

Is the content organized logically (IMRAD, chronological, or another system)? 2. Is the manuscript complete? 3. If an experiment or procedure is described, are all steps included, described clearly, and presented in a logical sequence? 4. Are all necessary charts and graphs present, accurate, and labeled correctly (to match the text)? Writing Style 19 5. Are all citations present, accurate, numbered correctly, and matched to the text? 6. Are there any grammatical errors (check sentence structure, tense, verb agreement, parallelism, punctuation, and pronoun usage)?

However, read the versions of the sentence carefully, and you will note considerable variations in meaning. Only I hit him in the eye yesterday. I only hit him in the eye yesterday. I hit only him in the eye yesterday. I hit him only in the eye yesterday. I hit him in only the eye yesterday. I hit him in the only eye yesterday. I hit him in the eye only yesterday. I hit him in the eye yesterday only. The variations in meaning range from “Only I” to “yesterday only,” visiting a one-eyed man (“the only eye”) along the way.

I wrote a check for almost $1,000. Finally, don’t worry about syntax. It’s all right if you forget you ever heard of it. But remember logic. If you think and write logically, you will not be guilty of writing a sentence such as the following: I went to a town that was 20 miles away on Tuesday. You might not notice the problem in syntax. The prepositional phrase on Tuesday is too far away from the word it modifies (went). But you should notice the problem in logic: if the town was 20 miles away on Tuesday, how far away was it on Monday?

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