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[MBA/경영대학원] Top 10 MBA Essay Style and Usage Tips

작성자ROSY|작성시간13.05.30|조회수3 목록 댓글 0

[MBA/경영대학원] Top 10 MBA Essay Style and Usage Tips 

 

1.

amount, number. Amount applies to quantities in mass; number is used for countable items. The hermit had a great amount of money, but the hermit had a great number of $100 bills.

 

2.

anybody, anyone, no one, everybody, everyone, someone. Each of these prononuns is singular and requires he or she (never they) on further reference: Has anybody lost his ticket? To avoid assuming maleness or femaleness in a general reference, rephrase: Has everyone bought a ticket? Often, a plural construction will serve: Have people all bought tickets?

 

3.

bring, take. Use bring to mean movement toward the speaker or writer; take means movement away from the speaker or writer (in fact, any movement that is not toward the speaker or writer). I take my friend to the airport and bring another friend home.

 

4.

compare. Use compare to when the intent is to liken one thing to another: The book compared the quarterback's role to the vice president's job. When the intent is to compare and contrast, or just to contrast, use compare with: They compared Terry's forecasting with Dana's and found Dana more accurate.

 

5.

comprise means consist of. The whole comprises the parts: The alliance comprises 35 organizations. Not: Thirty-five organizations comprise the alliance. Do not write comprised of.

 

6.

each other, one another. Two people look at each other; more than two look at one another. In the possessive: each other's books, never each others'.

 

7.

fewer, less. Use fewer for people or things that can be counted one by one: Fewer than 100 taxidermists attended. Use less for things that cannot be counted: There was less rain yesterday. Also use less with a number that describes a quantity as a single bulk amount: I recovered less than $1,500.

 

8.

herself, himself, myself. These reflexive pronouns serve to add emphasis (She fixed it herself) or to turn the action back to the subject (He makes himself stronger). Do not substitute them for ordinary objects: The meeting was between myself and John. Make it John and me.

 

9.

latter. Avoid uses of latter that force the reader to glance back: Both Mr. Miel and Ms. Agneau fought hard, but the latter prevailed. Rephrase and name names.

 

10.  not only ... but also. Constructions of this type require balance. The words that follow the first and second parts must be parallel in form (two adjectives, for example, serving comparable purposes): It would be not only unwieldy but also unworkable. Note how the symmetry is lost when words are misplaced: It would not only be unwieldy but also unworkable.

 

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