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The Mimicking of Known Successes
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#476 - Don't Get Your Atmoscarf In A Bunch
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I don't know if that's an English vs German thing though, or a professional writing vs school teachings thing.
How is it in different languages?
I don't mind the author using "said" repeatedly in text, but I do find it annoying in audio, he effused.
The brain does seem to skip over it when reading, but it just seems to stand out when listening, he uttered.
I'd rather the narrator distinguish between the voices, and also have a different tone for inner thought and vocal dialogue than repeated say "said", he expressed.
The brain does seem to skip over it when reading, but it just seems to stand out when listening, he uttered.
I'd rather the narrator distinguish between the voices, and also have a different tone for inner thought and vocal dialogue than repeated say "said", he expressed.


“I disagree,” said the man in the jaunty hat.
Oaken looked at him askance, “Well then you are wrong.”

Certainly, when listening, I'd rather just have the narrator do a different voice and tone to denote each character than for them to read all the "saids." Like Tassie Dave, when I'm reading I don't really care. I'm much more likely to be thrown out of a narrative by "she expostulated" than even 50 "she saids" in a row.

I was going to say the exact same thing! The constant repetition of “said” in the audiobook was an annoyance in an otherwise very enjoyable book. I remember thinking “couldn’t Wil Wheaton have dropped a few of these? I doubt Scalzi would have thrown a temper tantrum.”


Scalzi said...
https://twitter.com/scalzi/status/133...



Agreed. Different voices or tones work better for audio.

Orianthi - According To You, stay for the tapping guitar solo https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pu1aQ...




Flour Water Salt Yeast: The Fundamentals of Artisan Bread and Pizza A Cookbook
But certainly there are enriched breads that have milk, eggs, sugar, and so on. Commercial bread (think Wonderbread) - probably the most common kind sold in stores here - is loaded with sugar. But then NAmerican food manufacturers have learned that adding sugar (or, often, corn syrup) to all kinds of things is a great way to make people buy more.


We call it "Toastbrot" (even when not toasted) to distinguish it from the real bread!

Hm, now I'm flashing on some great Brats, liter steins of beer and an awesome clocktower. Forget London. Let's have Mystery at Muenchen!

It's a cliche that the thing Germans abroad are missing the most, is German bread ;-)

Joseph wrote: "I'm pretty sure that it's a French thing -- you can only call it a baguette if the only ingredients are flour, salt, yeast and water; otherwise, it's sparkling bread."
LOL!!
LOL!!

Hm, now I'm flashing on some great Brats, liter..."
Currywurst and fries. Gallons of beer.


We had a restaurant here, not sure if it is still around, made bread with yeast and the lees from making beer at the craft brewery down the street. Was so good.
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