Changes for page Simple sentences
Last modified by Lizzie Bruce on 2020/01/11 23:51
From version 2.21
edited by Lizzie Bruce
on 2019/03/07 14:15
on 2019/03/07 14:15
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To version 2.15
edited by Lizzie Bruce
on 2019/03/07 12:52
on 2019/03/07 12:52
Change comment:
There is no comment for this version
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... ... @@ -7,25 +7,19 @@ 7 7 * **motor impairments** – it's less tiring when you can understand what you read quickly 8 8 9 9 10 + 10 10 == Guidelines == 11 11 12 12 [[Plain English>>Plain English||anchor="pe"]] 13 13 14 -[[Simple sentences>>||anchor="ssl"]] 15 +[[Simple sentences >> ||anchor="ssl"]] 15 15 16 - [[Specialist terms>>||anchor="st"]]17 +Specialist terms 17 17 18 -[[Medicine, money and law>>doc:.Medical.WebHome]] 19 - 20 20 (% class="wikigeneratedid" %) 21 - [[Words to avoid>>doc:.Words to avoid.WebHome]]20 +Words to avoid 22 22 23 23 24 ----- 25 - 26 -(% class="wikigeneratedid" %) 27 -== == 28 - 29 29 == {{id name="pe"/}}Plain English == 30 30 31 31 Make content clear and understandable, to open the web up for users with different literacy levels and access challenges. ... ... @@ -81,21 +81,17 @@ 81 81 [[Plain language entry>>url:https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plain_language]], Wikipedia, last updated 2018 82 82 83 83 84 ----- 85 - 86 -(% class="wikigeneratedid" %) 87 -== == 88 - 89 89 == {{id name="ssl"/}}Simple sentences == 90 90 80 + 91 91 === 1. Make your average sentence 15 words long. === 92 92 93 -The maximum sentence length foragoodlevelof comprehension is 25 words.Split long sentences up into 2 or 3, or use bullet points.83 +The maximum sentence length we would recommend for easy comprehension is 25 words. 94 94 95 - Oxford Guideto plainEnglish, GOV.UK andlinguistsagree 15 wordsentencesarefine butabove40words ishard to understand.85 +You can split longer sentences up into 2 or 3 or restructure the content with bullet points to make meaning clearer for users. 96 96 97 97 98 -== =2. Avoid complex sentence structures. ===88 +== 2. Avoid complex sentence structures. == 99 99 100 100 They are less easy to comprehend quickly. Understanding them requires more cognitive effort than simple sentences. 101 101 ... ... @@ -104,20 +104,24 @@ 104 104 105 105 * number of clauses in a sentence, the more clauses the more complex it is 106 106 * distribution of associated words across the sentence – how easily can the brain 'parse a phrase': recognise, connect and comprehend words that together convey meaning 107 - 108 108 109 ->Example:"The red fox jumped over the gate." – easier to understand 110 ->"The fox, which was red, over the gate jumped." – harder to understand 111 111 99 +Example: 112 112 101 +"The red fox jumped over the gate." – easier to understand 102 +"The fox, which was red, over the gate jumped." – harder to understand 103 + 104 + 113 113 == Usability evidence for simple sentences == 114 114 115 - OxfordGuide to plainEnglish107 +"People with some learning disabilities read letter for letter – they do not bounce around like other users. They also cannot fully understand a sentence if it’s too long. People with moderate learning disabilities can understand sentences of 5 to 8 words without difficulty. By using common words we can help all users understand sentences of around 25 words." GOV.UK 116 116 117 - JyotiSanyal'Indlish'109 +The Oxford Guide to Plain English recommends 15–20 words per sentence. It also says: "…if you regularly exceed 40 words, you’ll certainly weary and deter your readers." 118 118 119 - Author AnnWylie111 +Jyoti Sanyal, author of 'Indlish' said: "Based on several studies, press associations in the USA have laid down a readability table. Their survey shows readers find sentences of 8 words or less very easy to read; 11 words, easy; 14 words fairly easy; 17 words standard; 21 words fairly difficult; 25 words difficult and 29 words or more, very difficult." 120 120 113 +Author Ann Wylie said: "When the average sentence length in a piece was fewer than 8 words long, readers understood 100% of the story. At 14 words, they could comprehend more than 90% of the information. But move up to 43-word sentences and comprehension dropped below 10 percent." 114 + 121 121 [[Writing for GOV.UK>>url:https://www.gov.uk/guidance/content-design/writing-for-gov-uk]], UK Government website 122 122 123 123 [['Sentence length: why 25 words is our limit'>>url:https://insidegovuk.blog.gov.uk/2014/08/04/sentence-length-why-25-words-is-our-limit/]], Inside GOV.UK, UK Government blog, 2014 ... ... @@ -159,68 +159,20 @@ 159 159 [[The Crystal Mark standard>>url:http://www.plainenglish.co.uk/services/crystal-mark/7-the-crystal-mark-standard.html]] Plain English Campaign, undated 160 160 161 161 162 ----- 156 +(% class="wikigeneratedid" %) 157 +Here's some sector specific guidance: 163 163 164 164 (% class="wikigeneratedid" %) 165 - == ==160 +Legal 166 166 167 -== {{id name="st"/}}Specialist terms == 162 +(% class="wikigeneratedid" %) 163 +Medical 168 168 169 169 (% class="wikigeneratedid" %) 170 - Make specialist contentcomprehensibleby non-experts.166 +Financial 171 171 172 172 173 - === 1. Explain specialist terms: anybody can access yourcontent. ===169 +{{children/}} 174 174 175 -Assuming who your audience is, and that they'll understand the technical terms you use, are common misconceptions. 176 176 177 - 178 -=== 2. Create content that all users can understand, whatever their expertise or background. === 179 - 180 -When you present a concept explain its parts and processes in detail. 181 - 182 -If you need to include a technical term consider explaining it. Make sure the surrounding language in plain language. 183 - 184 - 185 -=== 3. Help users understand specialist terms. === 186 - 187 -You could: 188 - 189 -* link to an existing definition – this could be an external site 190 -* add a explanatory definition after using the term 191 191 192 - 193 ->Example: 194 -> 195 ->"It is a Palladian style stone building, and contains a number of splendid paintings and much fine wood-carving." – original sentence. 196 -> 197 ->"It is a [[Palladian style>>url:http://www.vam.ac.uk/content/articles/s/style-guide-palladianism/]] stone building, and contains a number of splendid paintings and much fine wood-carving." – with link to a definition. 198 -> "It is a Palladian style stone building and contains a number of splendid paintings and much fine wood-carving. Palladian style architecture features include columns, symmetry and decorative arches." – with explanatory definition. 199 - 200 - 201 -== Usability evidence for explaining specialist terms == 202 - 203 -[['Writing Digital Copy for Domain Experts'>>url:https://www.nngroup.com/articles/writing-domain-experts/]], Nielson Norman Group, 2017 204 - 205 -[['Writing Digital Copy for Specialists vs. General Audiences'>>url:https://www.nngroup.com/videos/writing-digital-copy-specialists/?lm=how-users-read-on-the-web&pt=article]], Nielson Norman Group, undated 206 - 207 -[['Plain Language For Everyone, Even Experts'>>url:https://www.nngroup.com/videos/plain-language-for-experts/?lm=how-users-read-on-the-web&pt=article]] Nielson Norman Group, undated 208 - 209 -[['TechWhirl Fast 5: Understanding Plain Language and Simplified Technical English'>>url:https://techwhirl.com/techwhirl-fast-5-understanding-plain-language-simplified-technical-english/]], Connie Giordano, TechWhirl, 2017 210 - 211 -[['Advantages and disadvantages with Simplified Technical English'>>url:https://liu.diva-portal.org/smash/get/diva2:16816/FULLTEXT01]], Msc thesis paper, Karin Disborg, 2007 212 - 213 -[['Technical Writing Need Not Be Abstruse—Use Plain Language for Maximum Impact'>>url:https://digital.gov/2015/10/23/technical-writing-need-not-be-abstruse-use-plain-language-for-maximum-impact/#]], Colleen Blessing, 2015 214 - 215 -[['The Facets of the General Public as Audience'>>url:https://www.dropbox.com/s/2u2cybl7c57u0tr/AudienceIssues.pdf?dl=0]] Cheryl Stephens and Mariah Stufflebeam, 2017 216 - 217 - 218 -(% class="wikigeneratedid" %) 219 -We generated the [[original sentence about a specialist architecture term>>url:http://sentence.yourdictionary.com/palladian]] from yourdictionary.com. 220 - 221 - 222 -(% class="wikigeneratedid" %) 223 -Here's some sector specific guidance for [[medicine, money and law>>doc:.Medical.WebHome]]. 224 - 225 - 226 -And here's our list of jargon [[words to avoid>>doc:.Words to avoid.WebHome]]!