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Content creators love using them

Posted: Mon Dec 23, 2024 8:51 am
by leadseodata
Don’t assume you know the meaning, the context, the spelling, etc. Look it up. I realize that you can’t do this for every piece of content. But even if you did it once a month or so, you’d boost your word accuracy in other content too. Don’t be lazyThe very definition of cliché – a phrase or opinion that is overused and betrays lack of original thought – means you should rarely, if ever, use them in your writing.And yet, they become clichés for a reason.

. Why? They’re easy to think of (because they’re top of mind), they switzerland email address may easily convey a concept (because they were once original), or they may be popular with the intended audience (because they’re used frequently).What lazy phrases do you use? Scan your draft and highlight any clichés. Then go back and rethink them.Are there go-to phrases you see frequently in your content? If you have multiple writers and editors, it likely isn’t hard to find them.

Your team gets so used to them, they no longer “see” those as words to evaluate and edit.Mike Sweeney understood the need for clichés – tone-deaf, unprecedented, etc. – early on in the pandemic. “While they were completely valid for the time, they’ve become so overused. At least give them … a three-month hiatus,” he suggests.I agree. I see many instances where COVID- clichés can be removed and not replaced. Everybody knows we’re living in a pandemic.