yeahwriters:

jirasol:

it’s called AAVE, you [oh let’s censor this]

I hate how people here think that “proper general English” is the only way to speak English and all the others are considered “idiocy” like if language has anything to do with intelligence. I’m not even from the U.S. and I know this better than most of you.

Below is a list of all English dialects in North America:

American English - Standard American English is the general form

Canada

Canadian English:

Bermuda

Bermudian English

Native/American indigenous peoples

Native American/indigenous peoples of the Americas English dialects:

From the New England accents Wiki:

Some speakers of the Western New England dialect—especially those from the region surrounding the major cities of Springfield, Massachusetts and Hartford, Connecticut, along theConnecticut River—replace “t” with a glottal stop and replace “-ing” with “in’”. This would mean that those who do such would pronounce (for example) “sitting” as “sih-in’”, New Britain as “New Brih-nn”, and Clinton as “Clin-nn,” etc. T-glotallizing is found in other parts of the country as well, to varying degrees; however, it is prevalent in Southwestern New England.

I totally do this. I can’t say “mountain” or “kitten”; I say “mau-in” and “kih-en”. My parents always give me a hard time and it’s SO FUCKING ANNOYING. One time my stepmom told me that it made me sound less smart, which is ironic because I’m the most educated person in my entire extended family, and I wouldn’t think that a speech affect that makes you sound like you’re from Connecticut would dumb you down.

Seriously though, I met so many ultra-intelligent people with thick Southern accents when I was at UNC, and met so many idiots with perfect British accents when I lived in London. The accent=intelligence stereotype has totally been broken for me, which I’m quite thankful about.

Okay sorry /end rant.

fuckyourwritinghabits:

  • You are not a bad writer. Editing is painful for everyone. It is painful for me, it is painful for you, it is painful for every writer you’ve ever liked or admired.
  • Your writing is not shit. Your drafts are a deluge of ideas and enthusiasm. They are messy, incomplete things full of your wildest potential. They are supposed to be messy. I want you to look at it and think ‘this may not look good right now, but it doesn’t mean I’m not good. It’s a work in progress.’
  • Your ideas are worth writing. You had a reason to write these things. They’re important to you. They’re important enough to edit, even if it’s hard. Your ideas are important. Your ideas are worth the effort.

ktlb:

Tonight I found out that some of my all time favorite plants can kill me in less than a few hours. Good to know.

Hey, anon who was asking for natural poisons, maybe this will help?

sidebmagazine:

sidebmagazine:

Side B Magazine is devoted to publishing unknown and underrepresented voices in the contemporary arts world. We believe that all people have the right to read, see, and hear stories that affirm their identity.

Consequently, we have a special interest in publishing and promoting the work of women, people of color, immigrants, LGBTQ people, working class people, and people with disabilities, especially in the beginning of their careers.

Side B has published eight print issues, a special anthology issue, ran an arts and culture blog for two years, and are currently accepting submissions for our forthcoming issue due in July.

We are currently accepting submissions for fiction, poetry, and nonfiction. Please review our submission guidelines page before you submit.

Click the graphic to be redirected to our submittable page.

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"Practice, practice, practice writing. Writing is a craft that requires both talent and acquired skills. You learn by doing, by making mistakes and then seeing where you went wrong."
— Jeffrey A. Carver (via writingquotes)

aclutteredwritersbrain:

I’ve heard a lot of opinions over the last couple years on what does and does not make one a “real” writer, and frankly it’s getting a little annoying.

“A real writer doesn’t need inspiration.”

“A real writer writes every day.”


You know what a real writer does? A real writer writes, and feels a need to do so.

That’s it.

There are writers who need a little bit of inspiration via prompts and photos now and then, and there are writers who can jot down a story on the spot, no matter the subject. There are writers who write diligently every single day, sometimes even on a fixed schedule, and there are writers who don’t. That doesn’t make one writer more talented or more worthy of publishing than the other.   

If you have days where you just don’t feel like sitting down and typing up a story, that is perfectly OK. Those who write should feel welcome in a community of other writers, not be ostracized or vilified because their methods are different.  

drshebloggo:

DOES NOT NECESSARILY MEAN

  • a character who is physically strong
  • a character who is mentally strong
  • a character who is emotionally strong

ABSOLUTELY MEANS

  • a character who makes her own choices, even if they’re mistakes
  • a character whose point of view is explored at least briefly
  • a character who is the hero of her own story whether she knows it or not

And that’s just a strong character, really.