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How To/Tools>Guidelines> Federal Plain Language Guidelines> Avoid hidden verbs

Avoid hidden verbs


Use the strongest, most direct form of the verb possible.

Verbs are the fuel of writing - they give your sentences power and direction. They enliven your writing and make it more interesting. Too often, we hide verbs by turning them into nouns, making them less effective and using more words than we need. Hidden verbs are a particular problem in bureaucratic writing.

What are hidden verbs?

A hidden verb is a verb converted into a noun. It often needs an extra verb to make sense. So we write, “Please make an application for a personal loan” rather than “Please apply for a personal loan.”

Hidden verbs come in two forms. Some have endings such as -ment, -tion, -sion, and -ance or link with verbs such as achieve, effect, give, have, make, reach, and take. Often, you will find a hidden verb between the words “the” and “of.”

Hidden Verb Uncovered
To trace the missing payment, we need to carry out a review of the Agency’s accounts so we can gain an understanding of the reason the error occurred. To trace the missing payment, we need to review the Agency's accounts so we understand the reason the error occurred.
If you cannot make the payment of the $100 fee, you must make an application in writing before you file your tax return. If you cannot pay the $100 fee, you must apply in writing before you file your tax return.
This means we must undertake the calculation of new figures for the congressional hearing. This means we must calculate new figures for the congressional hearing.
The production of accurate statistics is important for the committee in the assessment of our homelessness policy. Producing accurate statistics is important to the committee in assessing our policy on homelessness.

Sources

  • Garner, Bryan A., Legal Writing in Plain English, 2001, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, p. 38 (14.)
  • Kimble, Joseph, Lifting the Fog of Legalese, 2006, Carolina Academic Press, Durham, NC., p. 71 (D.4).
  • Securities and Exchange Commission, Plain English Handbook, 1998, Securities and Exchange Commission, Washington, DC., p. 21.
  • Wright, Nick, at http://plainlanguage.gov/howto/wordsuggestions/hiddenverbs.cfm.

AUDIENCE

• Identify your audience and write to them
• Address separate audiences separately

ORGANIZATION

• Organize to meet your audience's needs
• Address one person, not a group
• Use lots of useful headings
• Write short sections

WRITING: Words

verbs
• Use active voice
• Use the simplest form of a verb
• Don't turn verbs into nouns
• Use "must" to convey requirements
• Use contractions when appropriate
nouns and pronouns
• Avoid noun strings
• Use "you" and other pronouns to speak directly to readers
• Minimize abbreviations
other word issues
• Use short, simple words
• Omit unnecessary words
• Dealing with definitions
• Use the same term consistently for a specific thought or object
• Avoid legal, foreign, and technical jargon
• Don't use slashes

WRITING: Sentences

• Write short sentences
• Keep subject, verb, and object close together
• Avoid double negatives and exceptions to exceptions
• Place the main idea before exceptions and conditions
• Place words carefully

WRITING: Paragraphs

• Have a topic sentence
• Use transition words
• Write short paragraphs
• Include only one issue in each paragraph

WRITING: Other

• Use examples
• Use vertical lists
• Use tables to make complex material easier to understand
• Consider using illustrations
• Use emphasis to highlight important concepts
• Minimize cross-references
• Design for ease of reading

TESTING

• Testing your Document
 
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