Kzinti_Killer wrote:petitchou wrote:Yet that's still no excuse for grammatical and spelling mistakes like its/it's, whose/who's, affect/effect, etc. That has nothing to do with dialogue.
Lets not forget except/accept, lead/led, really/rely, cloth/clothe, breath/breathe, and for some odd reason definitely/defiantly.
I'm currently undertaking a salvage operation on a defunct fic site in another fandom while I wait for my beta to finish with my latest chapter. The two young ladies that wrote the fic in question were two of the best story tellers that I've ever seen in that fandom. However they seem to have a profound aversion to spell-checker, as well as a serious antipathy for "and, the, but, if, then, than", commas, semi-colons, and certain pronouns. They also have the habit of mixing tenses. *sigh* It's a time consuming pain to clean it all up, but I have a thing for preserving good stories. Even if the technical side of the writing leaves something to be desired.
My own best blooper to date comes from using spell-checker while half awake one morning. I'd run the words "her fear" together into "herfear". Spellchecker turned it into "heifer", which was then dutifully posted with the chapter. I didn't catch it until days later.
Rick
Heifer! That's a first!

You are so right about the examples you gave. And how could I have forgotten breath/breathe? I've seen that mistake over and over. How hard is it to remember--one's a noun; the other a verb? Or lay/lie? I've seen the word "leant" several times also, as in "he leant back in bed." huh?
Good luck to you in working on the stories. You certainly have the necessary tools, but it doesn't make the work easier. It is sooooo painstaking. One of the things you mentioned that is quite hard to get across is tense. That is (and you understand this), a story is read over and over. Thus, the
primary action remains in present tense. Of course you can use past tense, but you don't switch back and forth, esp. in the same sentence. The truth is, some people have a natural gift for POV, for stream of consciousness, for exposition, for descriptive writing. But others can certainly practice and get better. I suggest reading (of all people) Steve Martin's
The Pleasure of My Company to understand tense in writing. For a classic, try one of Eudora Welty's short stories. Or why not grab an old copy of a 12th grade Harbrace or some other English textbook? You can find them for practically nothing in old book stores.
You mentioned something particularly frustrating to me. Spellcheck, in and of itself, can be limiting at times, because many words are simply left out and must be added. I wanted to check the spelling of misogynistic recently, and it was simply not in Word dictionary. Misogyny was, but not its adjective form. Cognates are not there; neither is much slang. But that's why you need good betas, of course.
There are some truly gifted writers of fan fiction, but they sometimes rely too much on the editing of others without giving the work so much as a cursory glance before posting another chapter--sometimes, admittedly, because fans are literally screaming for a new one. We certainly all make mistakes in writing; however, the hallmark of a
good writer, to me, is one whose work gets progressively better and better.
When you mentioned conjunctions, I also remembered another common mistake in expository writing--not dialogue. When you use "not only," you must follow it with "but also." And only a very few people do that. Ex. Liz
not only sacrificed her life with Max in the present,
but she
also gave up a future of happiness and fulfillment.
Anyway, enough rambling. GOOD LUCK!!!