To me at least, it would also be fine to add with after answer. The only difference to me is that answer is less formal/more informal than respond (respond is more formal/less informal than answer

To me at least, it would also be fine to add with after answer. The only difference to me is that answer is less formal/more informal than respond (respond is more formal/less informal than answer
Yes, though you can't really apply the idea too mechanically. Obviously, if you're talking about crocodiles, you're going to use the word "crocodile" a lot.
At the same time, repetition is one of the oldest stylistic tricks in the book. A classic example is Marc Antony's speech in Shakespeare's Julius Caesar, with the repeated refrain "And Brutus is an honorable man." Cleverly, Antony makes each repetition more and more ironic. It wouldn't work as well if it wasn't an exact repetition.Content: the title could just as well have been Misanthropy Theater. They are mostly satirical stories of slackers in dead-end jobs, their general sense of being smarter than everyone else tempered by a realization that this is getting them absolutely nowhere. The latest installment, "QA Confidential", starts out discussing temp jobs, and moves on to the dilemma of QA (no one, but no one, wants to see the bug you've found). Much of this is blisteringly satirical (and even insightful), and you won't want to miss the hilarious media parodies, such as the Tetris-like game called Shit Keeps Falling.
"Satirical"?zompist wrote: ↑Tue Jun 15, 2021 12:10 pm It's hard to come up with an example offhand, so I've altered a passage from one of my comics reviews. See if you can spot the jarringly re-used word!
Content: the title could just as well have been Misanthropy Theater. They are mostly satirical stories of slackers in dead-end jobs, their general sense of being smarter than everyone else tempered by a realization that this is getting them absolutely nowhere. The latest installment, "QA Confidential", starts out discussing temp jobs, and moves on to the dilemma of QA (no one, but no one, wants to see the bug you've found). Much of this is blisteringly satirical (and even insightful), and you won't want to miss the hilarious media parodies, such as the Tetris-like game called Shit Keeps Falling.
I've seen the opposite parodied, generally in the context of feature writing. But it was so pounded into me in my writing courses that I've had to go back and relearn when using the same word again can be effective rather than dull.
Right. In this example, the idea is that the second use of the word adds little-- it just feels like it's repeating an idea already expressed.Raphael wrote: ↑Tue Jun 15, 2021 12:18 pm Thank you!
"Satirical"?zompist wrote: ↑Tue Jun 15, 2021 12:10 pm It's hard to come up with an example offhand, so I've altered a passage from one of my comics reviews. See if you can spot the jarringly re-used word!
Content: the title could just as well have been Misanthropy Theater. They are mostly satirical stories of slackers in dead-end jobs, their general sense of being smarter than everyone else tempered by a realization that this is getting them absolutely nowhere. The latest installment, "QA Confidential", starts out discussing temp jobs, and moves on to the dilemma of QA (no one, but no one, wants to see the bug you've found). Much of this is blisteringly satirical (and even insightful), and you won't want to miss the hilarious media parodies, such as the Tetris-like game called Shit Keeps Falling.
You can generally get away with re-using grammatical words.(In a recent post in the Random Thread in Ephemera, I originally wanted to use the word "now" twice in the same line, but then decided to change the first "now" to "at this moment". That led me to ask my question here.)
Yes. One of my schoolteachers (incidentally, one of the few who really liked me at the time) was really strict about this.
That reminds me of the arbitrary rule some people have to avoid the passive voice at all costs (despite how useful the passive voice can be).
Thankfully I have not encountered anything of this sort from any of my English teachers, and it does not seem that English writing in general goes to such ridiculous lengths.Ryusenshi wrote: ↑Tue Jun 22, 2021 11:40 am French teachers are also extremely hostile to any form of repetition. French journalists similarly avoid using the same word twice, which means they often resort to clichés: if you're writing something about the city of Marseilles, you can't write "Marseilles" twice, so you'll say "the Phocean city" ("la cité phocéenne" ) instead; nobody knows what "Phocean" even means, but God forbid that you say something original! Similarly, Japan is always "the land of the Rising Sun", the English language is always "Shakespeare's tongue", etc.
There are multiple style books out there, but the general rule is you capitalize all initial and final words, and all other words except articles, prepositions, and coordinating conjunctions.
Apparently, from what I just read, you are also supposed to write medial words shorter than four letters as lowercase as well, but to me that would seem strange for content words that just happen to be short.