Post by account_disabled on Jan 2, 2024 5:18:45 GMT
Opening the books published by the same publisher, we notice uniformity within the texts , for example in the dialogues, in the use of italics and quotation marks to cite magazines, works, etc. Even if we don't realize it, we have set orthoeditorial norms in our blogs , just as these norms exist in our manuscripts. Some of you, for example, use hyphens for dialogues - which I will return to below - and others, like me, corporals. The ortho-editorial elements of a text Considering the ortho-editorial elements in our texts means having a more orderly writing, "regulated" by precise habits, even if personal, which make our posts and our manuscripts coherent with each other.
How to quote a passage in the blog and in literature Here I have often quoted passages from books or from other people's and my own posts, and to do so I used the HTML tag <blockquote>, which you can find both in WordPress and in Blogspot. Blogspot quote Blogspot quote WordPress quote WordPress quote Using this tag is preferable to me than Special Data classic quotes or other less semantic devices, because it encloses the text in a sort of "box" with graphics different from the rest. And in fiction? I really like quoting passages in my stories, just as I like finding quotes in the novels I read. Even in that case, rules have been defined. The quote is smaller than the rest, perhaps aligned to the right, etc.
How to insert notes in blogs and literature The use of notes has been somewhat lost. My mother has a copy of Silvio Pellico's My Prisons , it was my grandfather's, an edition from the 1940s. That book is full of notes, on one page there is only one line of text and the remaining space is taken up by notes. I fell in love with that edition at first sight. In my book on blogging I have included many, all strictly at the bottom of the page, the most logical place. Notes, like quotes, are written in a smaller font. 1. THE MOST FAMOUS ITALIAN COPYWRITER ON THE WEB. But can we insert notes in a blog? In her article " Notes on the web " Luisa Carrada 1 says that "they are not put". Because "notes on the web are links" - I just inserted an ortho-editorial rule, did you notice? – And you're right. Some time ago in an old blog I needed to insert notes and I put them "at the bottom of the page" like in a book, but this forces the reader to go down and back up in the post. I took advantage of the links or, rather, the anchors, as they are called.
How to quote a passage in the blog and in literature Here I have often quoted passages from books or from other people's and my own posts, and to do so I used the HTML tag <blockquote>, which you can find both in WordPress and in Blogspot. Blogspot quote Blogspot quote WordPress quote WordPress quote Using this tag is preferable to me than Special Data classic quotes or other less semantic devices, because it encloses the text in a sort of "box" with graphics different from the rest. And in fiction? I really like quoting passages in my stories, just as I like finding quotes in the novels I read. Even in that case, rules have been defined. The quote is smaller than the rest, perhaps aligned to the right, etc.
How to insert notes in blogs and literature The use of notes has been somewhat lost. My mother has a copy of Silvio Pellico's My Prisons , it was my grandfather's, an edition from the 1940s. That book is full of notes, on one page there is only one line of text and the remaining space is taken up by notes. I fell in love with that edition at first sight. In my book on blogging I have included many, all strictly at the bottom of the page, the most logical place. Notes, like quotes, are written in a smaller font. 1. THE MOST FAMOUS ITALIAN COPYWRITER ON THE WEB. But can we insert notes in a blog? In her article " Notes on the web " Luisa Carrada 1 says that "they are not put". Because "notes on the web are links" - I just inserted an ortho-editorial rule, did you notice? – And you're right. Some time ago in an old blog I needed to insert notes and I put them "at the bottom of the page" like in a book, but this forces the reader to go down and back up in the post. I took advantage of the links or, rather, the anchors, as they are called.