The Consonant Professional Vowels to Syllable
- Ronald Everett Maynard

- May 14
- 2 min read

The debate over writing aides forces me to question the genuineness of some writers' passion. If you need an application to write successful speech patterns, the profession may not be a worthy avenue to pursue. My literary career started without the mechanics, but I wanted to succeed as a person who enabled reading to teach me to write professionally. I carried The Elements of Style by E. B. White and William Strunk Jr around in my back pocket until the rules for writers became second nature.
A consonant professional uses vowels to create syllables that form words relevant to sentences. Developing a thesis statement that researches and elaborates upon the forms of speech patterns a reader comprehends. Maybe your syllables describe someone, something, or somewhere. The importance of words is to show people we writers care about characterization, setting, clarity, conciseness, and engagement, as the syntax of any sentence requires correctness.
An application like Microsoft Word provides Flesch Kincaid to offer readability statistics, or Grammarly makes suggestions to guide your chosen speech patterns. A writer knows when to break the rules and delves deeply into what is known as truth. An expressionist finds ways to write actively, emotionally committed to human nature, or the emotionless text directs readers through a passive process, but either way, wording remains a practice.
A wordsmith understands the difference in grammatical significance, as some words have multiple meanings. The structure of a well-developed piece of literature can change the landscape of an understanding. Writers have fun with the projects that come across their intellect, because the passion of an imaginative process will help define whatever a writer decides to detail.
I hope this explanation helped to settle the debate. Using online platforms for contextual advice becomes optional. Know when, where, and how to write in whatever style and voice gets your point across, but do it without disrespecting the writing profession.



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