Effective writing skills are to a writer what petrol is to a car. Like the petrol and car relationship, without solid skills writers cannot move ahead. These skills don’t come overnight, and they require patience and determination. You have to work smart and hard to acquire them. Only with experience, you can enter the realm of effective, always-in-demand writers.
Of course, effective writing requires a good command of the language in which you write or want to write. Once you have that command, you need to learn some tips and tricks so that you can have an edge over others in this hard-to-succeed world of writers. There are some gifted writers, granted. But gifted writers also need to polish their skills frequently in order to stay ahead of competition and earn their livelihood.
We collected over 50 useful and practical tools and resources that will help you to improve your writing skills. You will find copywriting blogs, dictionaries, references, teaching classes, articles, tools as well as related articles from other blogs. Something is missing? Please let us know in the comments to this post!
Ultimate Style: The Rules Of Writing
The web’s ultimate guide to grammar provides a database of topics and an
easy-to-search A-Z list of common questions (via)
Use English Punctuation Correctly
A quick and useful crash course in English punctuation.
HyperGrammar
An extensive electronic grammar course at the University of Ottawa’s
Writing Centre.
Grammar Girl
Mignon Fogarty’s quick and dirty tips for better writing. Grammar Girl
provides short, friendly tips to improve your writing. Covering the
grammar rules and word choice guidelines that can confound even the best
writers, Grammar Girl makes complex grammar questions simple with memory
tricks to help you recall and apply those troublesome grammar rules.
Better Writing Skills
This site contains 26 short articles with writing tips about ampersands,
punctuation, character spacing, apostrophes, semicolons and commas,
difference between i.e. and e.g. etc.
The Guide to Grammar and Writing
An older, yet very useful site that will help you to improve your
writing on word & sentence level, paragraph level and also essay &
research paper level.
Writer’s Block
A compact resource with over 20 articles that cover abbreviations,
capitalization, numbers, punctuation, word usage and writing styles.
Paradigm Online Writing
Assistant
This site contains some useful articles that explain common grammar
mistakes, basic punctuation, basic sentence concepts etc. Worth visiting
and reading.
The Learning Centre contains similar articles, but with more
examples.
Jack Lynch’s Guide to Grammar and Style
These notes are a miscellany of grammatical rules and explanations,
comments on style, and suggestions on usage put by Jack Lynch, an
Associate Professor in the English department of the Newark campus of
Rutgers University, for his classes.
English Style Guide
This guide is based on the style book which is given to all journalists
at The Economist. The site contains various hints on how to use
metaphors, punctuation, figures, hyphens etc. Brief and precise.
Technical Writing
An extensive guidance on grammar and style for technical writing.
40+ Tips to Improve your Grammar and Punctuation
“Purdue University maintains an
online writing
lab and I spent some time digging through it. Originally the goal
was to grab some good tips that would help me out at work and on this
site, but there is simply too much not to share.”
Common Errors in English
A collection of common errors in English, with detailed explanations and
descriptions of each error.
AskOxford: Better Writing
A very useful reference for classic errors and helpful hints with a
terrible site navigation.
Dr. Grammar’s
Frequently Asked Questions
Answers to common grammar questions related to English grammar, with
examples and additional explanations.
English Grammar FAQ
A list of common English language problems and how to solve them. This
list was compiled through an extensive archive of postings to
alt.usage.english by John Lawler, Linguistics, U. Michigan, Ann Arbor.
Writer’s Digest
Writer’s Digest offers information on writing better and getting
published. The site also includes community forums, blogs and huge lists
of resources for writers (via)
Infoplease: General Writing Skills
Various articles that aim to teach students how to write better.
The
Elements of Style
A freely available online version of the book “The Elements of Style” by
William Strunk, Jr., the classic reference book.
Poynter Writing Tools
A blog dedicated to writers and journalists. Poynter also provides
Fifty Writing Tools: Quick List, a collection of podcasts related to
writing.
learning lab / writing skills
This site offers over 20 .pdf-documents with main rules and common
mistakes related to summarising, paraphrasing, referencing, sentences,
paragraphs, linking words and business writing. Handy.
Using English
UsingEnglish.com provides a large collection of English as a Second
Language (ESL) tools & resources for students, teachers, learners and
academics. Browse our grammar glossary and references of irregular
verbs, phrasal verbs and idioms, ESL forums, articles, teacher handouts
and printables, and find useful links and information on English. Topics
cover the spectrum of ESL, EFL, ESOL, and EAP subject areas.
Online Writing Courses
Free courses are a great way to improve your writing skills. The courses
shown here focus on several types of creative writing, including poetry,
essay writing and fiction writing.
Copywriting 101: An Introduction to Copywriting
This tutorial is designed to get you up and running with the basics of
writing great copy in ten easy lessons. Afterwards, you’ll get
recommendations for professional copywriting training, plus links to
tutorials on SEO copywriting and writing killer headlines.
A Guide to Writing Well
“This guide was mainly distilled from On Writing Well by William Zinsser
and The Elements of Style by Strunk and White. Other sources are listed
in the bibliography. My memory being stubborn and lazy, I compiled this
so I could easily refresh myself on writing well. I hope it will also be
helpful to others.”
Online Copywriting 101: The Ultimate Cheat Sheet
The ultimate cheat sheet with various Web copy resources that
copywriters can use to lean the best writing tips and ideas.
More copywriting cheat sheets.
CopyBlogger
Now that blogging has become the smartest strategy for growing an
authoritative web site, it’s your copywriting skills that will set you
apart and help you succeed. And this is where Copyblogger comes into
play. Brian Clark’s popular blog covers useful copywriting tips,
guidelines and ideas.
Write to Done
Leo Babuta’s blog about the craft and the art of writing. The blog
covers many topics: journalism, blog writing, freelance writing,
fiction, non-fiction, getting a book deal, the business of writing, the
habit of writing. Updated twice weekly.
Problogger
Darren Rowse’s blog helps bloggers to add income streams to their blogs
– among other things, Darren also has hundreds of useful articles
related to copy writing.
Men with Pens
A regularly updated blog with useful tips for writers, freelancers and
entrepreneurs.
Time to
Write
Jurgen Wolff’s tips, ideas, inspirations for writers and would-be
writers and other creative people.
Daily
Writing Posts
“Whether you are an attorney, manager, student or blogger, writing
skills are essential for your success. Considering the rise of the
information age, they are even more important, as people are surrounded
by e-mails, wikis, social networks and so on.
“It can be difficult to hone one’s writing skills within this fast paced environment. Daily Writing Tips is a blog where you will find simple yet effective tips to improve your writing.”
CopyWriting
“Copywriting
website is jam-packed with useful information, articles, resources and
services geared to show you how to write mouth-watering,
profit-generating copy. Copy that changes minds and dramatically boosts
your results. So come right in… you’re going to like what you see! It
has copywriting courses, tools, articles and much more.”
Dumb Little Man: Writing
Jay White provides a handful of tips that may increase your productivity
and improve your skills. You’ll find many tips and ideas for better
writing in his archive category “Writing”.
The
Copywriter Underground
A copywriting blog by the freelance writer Tom Chandler.
Lifehack: Writing
This collection of resources includes links to 30 posts on Lifehack that
may help you to improve your writing skills.
OneLook Dictionary
Search
More than 13,5 million words in more than 1024 online dictionaries are
indexed by the OneLook search engine. You can find, define, and
translate words all at one site.
Definr
A fast, suggest-as-you-type dictionary which you can add to your Firefox
search box or use in bookmarklet form (see
this post) (via
Lifehacker).
Visuwords
Look up words to find their meanings and associations with other words
and concepts. Produce diagrams reminiscent of a neural net. Learn how
words associate.
Merriam
Webster: Visual Dictionary
The Visual Dictionary Online is an interactive dictionary with an
innovative approach. From the image to the word and its definition, the
Visual Dictionary Online is an all-in-one reference. Search the themes
to quickly locate words, or find the meaning of a word by viewing the
image it represents. What’s more, the Visual Dictionary Online helps you
learn English in a visual and accessible way.
OneLook Reverse Dictionary
OneLook’s reverse dictionary lets you describe a concept and get back a
list of words and phrases related to that concept. Your description can
be a few words, a sentence, a question, or even just a single word.
Online Spell
Checker
Free online spell checker that provides you with quick and accurate
results for texts in 28 languages (German, English, Spanish, French,
Russian, Italian, Portuguese etc.). An alternative tool:
Spelljax.
GNU Aspell
GNU Aspell is a Free and Open Source spell checker designed to
eventually replace Ispell. It can either be used as a library or as an
independent spell checker. Its main feature is that it does a superior
job of suggesting possible replacements for a misspelled word than just
about any other spell checker out there for the English language.
WordWeb
A one-click English thesaurus and dictionary for Windows that can look
up words in almost any program. It works off-line, but can also look up
words in web references such as the Wikipedia encyclopedia. Features of
the free version include definitions and synonyms, proper nouns, 150 000
root words and 120 000 synonym sets.
write rhymes
As you write, hold the alt key and click on a word to find a rhyme for
it.
Verbix
This English conjugator will help you to determine how to use verbs in
the proper tense.
Wordcounter
Wordcounter ranks the most frequently used words in any given body of
text. Use this to see what words you overuse or maybe just to find some
keywords from a document.
Text
Statistics Generator is an alternative tool: it gives you a quick
analysis of number of word occurrences.
Advanced Text Analyzer (requires registration)
This free tool analyzes texts, calculating the number of words, lexical
density, words per sentence, character per word and the readability of
the text as well as word analysis, phrase analysis and graded analysis.
Useful! Alternative
tool.
Graviax Grammar Checker
Grammar rules (XML files containing regular expressions) and grammar
checker. Currently only for the English language, although it could be
extended. Unit tests are built into the rules. Might form the basis of a
grammar checker for OpenOffice.
txt2tags
Txt2tags is a document generator. It reads a text file with minimal
markup as **bold** and //italic// and converts it to the formats HTML,
LaTeX, MediaWiki, Google Code Wiki, DokuWiki, Plain text and more.
Markdown
Markdown is a text-to-HTML conversion tool for web writers. Markdown
allows you to write using an easy-to-read, easy-to-write plain text
format, then convert it to structurally valid XHTML (or HTML). Requires
Perl 5.6.0 or later.
50 Useful Open Source Resources For Writers and Writing Majors
And if you’re a writing major, why not take advantage of all the
opportunities to get great free and open source resources that can help
you to write, edit and organize your work? Here’s a list of fifty open
source tools that you can use to make your writing even better.
English
Forums
If you have a question related to English Grammar, join these forums to
get advice from others who know the language better or can provide you
with some related information.
The Ultimate Writing Productivity Resource
A round-up of applications, services, resources, tools, posts and
communities for writers and bloggers who want to improve their writing
skills.
100 Useful Web Tools for Writers
100 useful Web tools that will help you with your career, your sanity
and your creativity whenever your write.
More
useful
round-ups.
From http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/06/28/50-free-resources-that-will-improve-your-writing-skills/