Ellipsis Exercises -

A dynamic, browser based visualization library.
The library is designed to be easy to use, to handle large amounts of dynamic data, and to enable manipulation of and interaction with the data.
The library consists of the components DataSet, Timeline, Network, Graph2d and Graph3d.

Ellipsis Exercises -

This puzzle is more difficult than that one was.

“Will you be attending the meeting?” “Yes, I will be attending the meeting.” ellipsis exercises

We often think of good writing as including everything —every detail, every transition, every repeated phrase. But the most polished writers know a secret: sometimes, the best word is no word at all. This puzzle is more difficult than that one was

Example: Coming to the show? B: Can’t. Work. A: Saturday too? B: Especially Saturday. A: Sorry to hear. Now go practice. Your sentences will thank you for what you don’t write. Example: Coming to the show

This puzzle is more difficult than that puzzle was difficult.

Enter the (plural: ellipses ). While many people know the ellipsis as those three little dots (…) used to show a trailing thought, linguists and grammar experts use the term to describe something broader: the omission of words that are unnecessary because the context makes them clear.

Using ellipsis correctly can make your prose tighter, your dialogue snappier, and your comparisons more elegant. The best way to learn? Targeted exercises.

This puzzle is more difficult than that one was.

“Will you be attending the meeting?” “Yes, I will be attending the meeting.”

We often think of good writing as including everything —every detail, every transition, every repeated phrase. But the most polished writers know a secret: sometimes, the best word is no word at all.

Example: Coming to the show? B: Can’t. Work. A: Saturday too? B: Especially Saturday. A: Sorry to hear. Now go practice. Your sentences will thank you for what you don’t write.

This puzzle is more difficult than that puzzle was difficult.

Enter the (plural: ellipses ). While many people know the ellipsis as those three little dots (…) used to show a trailing thought, linguists and grammar experts use the term to describe something broader: the omission of words that are unnecessary because the context makes them clear.

Using ellipsis correctly can make your prose tighter, your dialogue snappier, and your comparisons more elegant. The best way to learn? Targeted exercises.

Sponsors