Receiving Incorrect Editorial Advice

8 responses to “Receiving Incorrect Editorial Advice”

    • Yes. She wasn’t my editor, just an editor presenting an online workshop. I shared this information and she politely pushed back and said writers should avoid using the verb -ing construction regardless of whether or not it was passive voice or not. Sigh.

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      • Well, I am a hawk to some of these topics. Using the passive voice I one I use with defined care. I always wince (more than little) when others at our level of writing expertise don’t listen to their own conversation.

        Sigh, to, two, too!

        s

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  1. Yes!! I’ve never pushed back when told I was wrong, as my basis of knowledge isn’t as strong as yours. (And I only scored a 540, during the same administration!) But it’s always made sense to me. Thanks for posting!! I was looking for good information (not, good information was being looked for!)

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  2. The editor in your online workshop is (still, probably), to be polite, misinformed. -ing is not a past participle. Rather, it is the continuous form of the verb, used to indicate that the action was/is/will be ongoing at a particular time and/or in a particular place: “I’ll be teaching my Cultural Anthropology class next Monday.” The past participle “is used in forming perfect and passive tenses and sometimes as an adjective, e.g. looked in have you looked?, lost in lost property.” (I found that explanation by googling.) Note that the explanation uses the past participle (“is used”) for passive voice, which inter alia gets deployed in a lot of scientific writing, where the aim is to describe procedure and results while getting Joe the lab chemist out of the field of vision. Emphasis is on the action, not the agent. Here’s the past perfect in a sentence: “I had been walking for hours and was now tired and thirsty.”

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