Sentence Patterns
Formal Research Methods
Informal Research Methods
Achieving Emphasis Through Style
Miscellaneous
100

Contains one complete thought with a subject and predicate verb 

Simple Sentence 

100

Valuable background and supplementary information is available through manual searching of resources in public and college libraries. These traditional sources include books as well as newspaper, magazine, and journal articles. Other sources are encyclopedias, reference, books, handbooks, dictionaries, directories, and almanacs.

Search Manually 

100

Get information from the individual giving the assignment. 

Talk with the Boss

100

If an idea is significant, tell the reader 

Label the Main Idea

100

Poison in apples 

Cyanide

200

Contains at least two independent clauses and one dependent clause 

Compound-Complex Sentence

200

Torrents of information are available online. Beyond Google, college and public libraries provide digital retrieval services that permit access to a wide array of books, journals, magazines, newspapers, blogs, and other online literature. With so much data drowning today's researchers, they struggle to decide what is current, relevant, and credible. Help is on the way, however! You'll learn more about researching and using electronic sources effectively in Chapter 10.

Access Digital Sources 

200

If you are responding to an inquiry or drafting a routine message, you often can find background information such as previous correspondence in your own files or those of the company. You might consult the company wiki or other digital and manual files. You might also consult colleagues. 

Search the Company's Files

200

Place the main idea in a simple sentence or in an independent clause.

Give the Important Idea the Spotlight 

200

The only king in a deck of cards without a moustache

King of Hearts 

300

Contains two complete but related thoughts. May be joined by (a) a conjunction such as and, but, or or; (b) a semicolon; or (c) a conjunctive adverb such as However, Consequently, and Therefore.

Compound Sentence 

300

Another source of primary data is experimentation. Instead of merely asking for the target audience's opinion, scientific researchers present choices with controlled variables. 

Conduct Scientific Experiments 

300

Alone or with others, discuss ideas for the writing task at hand, and record at least a dozen ideas without judging them. Small group are especially fruitful in brainstorming because people spin ideas off one another. Use your laptop for a quick, erasable surface to record ideas.

Brainstorm for Ideas 

300

Vivid words are emphatic because the reader can picture ideas clearly 

Use vivid, not general, words.

300

The most money ever paid for a cow at auction

$1.3 million. 

400

Contains an independent clause (a complete thought) and a dependent clause (a thought that cannot stand by itself). Dependent clauses are often introduced by words such as Although, Since, Because, When, and If. When dependent clauses precede independent clauses, they always are followed by a comma.

Complex Sentence 

400

To develop firsthand, primary information for a project, go directly to the source. In helping to launch an new Forever 21 outlet in Canada, you might travel to possible sites and check them out. If you need information about how many shoppers pass by a location or visit a shopping center, you might conduct a traffic count. If you need information about consumers, you could search blogs, Twitter, wikis, and Facebook fan pages. To learn more about specific shoppers, you could use questionnaires, interviews, or focus groups. Formal research often includes scientific smapling methods that enable investigators to make accurate judgments and valid predictions. 

Investigate Primary Sources

400

Consider talking with individuals at who the message is aimed. They can provide clarifying information that tells you what they want to know and how you should shape your remarks. Suggestions for conducting more formal interview are presented in Chapter 10.

Interview the Target Audience

400

Ideas have less competition from surrounding words when they appear first or last in a sentence 

Place the Important Idea First or Last

400

The little dot above a lowercase "i" or "j" called

Tittle