Post by account_disabled on Dec 3, 2023 3:21:38 GMT
Always win over new readers At the beginning of 2013, I remember, there were around 90 subscribers to the Penna blu newsletter. Today they exceed 600. For me it is a huge number and every now and then I ask myself: where are all these people? What is his name? If everyone commented, the blog would explode. But it would be a nice bang. Having more and more readers is nice, because someone appreciates what you write. Of course, I have a special eye on those who come to comment – ​​how difficult it is to do so today! – but for me they are all the same anyway.
Let's say that those who comment and share are sure to have read the post, while those who subscribe to the newsletter might never even read the blog. But how do you win new readers? I still ask myself this, Phone Number Data because they arrive on Penna blu, but in the second blog they struggle to arrive. Of course, I can confidently say, it takes time.Why do I want to distinguish spoken language from written language? Because different receptors (senses) come into play in understanding the information given to us: listening to a speech : we use our hearing to store it, we hear those words and record them in our memory, aided by gestures and gaze; reading texts : we use our sight to recognize those words, associating signs with the sounds we have learned over the years.
So isn't there a big difference between spoken and written language? Jargons and colloquialisms in online writing I try to avoid them as much as possible, especially slang phrases which, as we know, are of a regional, if not provincial or even urban, nature. Words that I am used to hearing in Rome are sometimes incomprehensible in neighboring countries and vice versa, and it is not dialect in those cases. Colloquial words or phrases are not only informal, but belong to everyday conversations, familiar and forcefully enter our language, sometimes rewriting the syntax. We use them to strengthen or simplify a concept just as in our speech - but also in our writings - there is frequent use of some verbs (seek, have, stare, etc.). There are so many colloquialisms and I think it is impossible to list all the examples.
Let's say that those who comment and share are sure to have read the post, while those who subscribe to the newsletter might never even read the blog. But how do you win new readers? I still ask myself this, Phone Number Data because they arrive on Penna blu, but in the second blog they struggle to arrive. Of course, I can confidently say, it takes time.Why do I want to distinguish spoken language from written language? Because different receptors (senses) come into play in understanding the information given to us: listening to a speech : we use our hearing to store it, we hear those words and record them in our memory, aided by gestures and gaze; reading texts : we use our sight to recognize those words, associating signs with the sounds we have learned over the years.
So isn't there a big difference between spoken and written language? Jargons and colloquialisms in online writing I try to avoid them as much as possible, especially slang phrases which, as we know, are of a regional, if not provincial or even urban, nature. Words that I am used to hearing in Rome are sometimes incomprehensible in neighboring countries and vice versa, and it is not dialect in those cases. Colloquial words or phrases are not only informal, but belong to everyday conversations, familiar and forcefully enter our language, sometimes rewriting the syntax. We use them to strengthen or simplify a concept just as in our speech - but also in our writings - there is frequent use of some verbs (seek, have, stare, etc.). There are so many colloquialisms and I think it is impossible to list all the examples.