Writer's Relief, Inc.
RSSTwitterFacebookLinkedInYoutubeTwitter
  • Home
  • About
    • FAQ
    • About Us
    • Testimonials
    • About Our Clients
    • Press
  • Writer’s Services
    • Overview
    • Full Service
    • A La Carte
    • A La Carte PLUS
    • Proofreading & Manuscript Prep.
    • Children’s Books
    • Products
      • E-books For Writers
      • Gift Certificates
      • Merchandise
      • Free Badges
  • Submissions
    • Submission Form
    • Submission Guidelines
    • Peter K. Hixson Award
  • Leads & Tips
    • Subscribe
    • Blog
    • Most Popular Articles
    • Video Tutorials
    • Free Publishing Tool Kit
  • Classifieds
    • Classifieds Home
    • Writing Contests
    • Anthologies
    • Conferences
    • Client News
    • Advertising Info
  • Author Websites
  • Contact Us
  • Clients Only
    • Client Log-In
    • Work Cover
The Use Of Gender-Neutral Language In Your Writing Self-Publishing: What Type Of Publisher Is Best For You?

Perfecting Your Personal Proofreading

By Writers Relief Staff on March 9, 2008 · 2 Comments ·

At Writer’s Relief, we offer proofreading services to writers of books, novels, stories, poems, and essays. If you would like to learn how to be a better professional proofreader or how to do a better job of proofreading your own writing, keep reading our helpful tips!

1. Proof your work both electronically AND by hard copy. Electronically, you can spot formatting errors and use the spell-check function. And it’s easier to read a print-out than to read from the computer screen, thereby catching those errors that the eye is most likely to skip over.

2. Choose a time of day when you’re most alert and fresh. Take a hard copy of your work, a red pen or pencil, and read through one time, word for word. Run a pen or your finger along as you go to avoid skipping two-letter words and to avoid skipping from one obvious error to the next and ignoring the words between. Make corrections or notations as you go.

3. Bear in mind your own most common mistakes and then proofread for those specific errors. For example, if you have difficulty with comma placement, proof for punctuation only. Then proof again, concentrating on another troublesome area such as run-on sentences or dialogue. If you’re not sure of your own “trouble areas,” have someone else read your work and flag the most common errors.

4. Check boilerplate text, headers, footers, and text in tiny font—all areas that tend to get skipped over.

5. Be prepared to look it up. Use a standard dictionary (Merriam-Webster, for example) and double-check hyphenated words (non-existent or nonexistent?) and the correct spelling of foreign places or historical figures; the Internet is a great tool for looking up brand names (Jell-O), pop culture references, or song lyrics.

6. Proofread electronically by running your spell-check program. Although the spelling function is fallible (it won’t flag “form” as incorrect if you meant to use “from”), it does catch misspellings that the eye often can’t.

7. Check for formatting errors. Turn on the “view ¶” function to check for spacing, indents, etc. Check the margins. Turn on View, “Reveal Codes” to check for problems in codes. You can use the find and replace function to find mistakes that are likely made repeatedly. (Search for “it” if you want to check for “its” versus “it’s” throughout.)

8. Be sure to take breaks between steps, giving your eyes a fresh perspective each pass through.

9. Read your work aloud. This forces you to slow down and hear the difference between what you wrote and what you meant to write.

We are pleased to offer more information about proofing your own work and making a living in the proofreading industry. Writer’s Relief can proofread, format, and market your writing to literary journals, magazines, and book agents.

TweetShare on Tumblr
Tagged with: grammar rules • how to be a better proofreader • improve • proofread • proofreading • proofreading techniques • writer techniques 
If you enjoyed this article, please share it with your writer friends!
RedditFacebookTwitterDeliciousStumbleUponDigg

2 Responses to Perfecting Your Personal Proofreading

  1. Sally H. says:
    April 13, 2009 at 8:19 pm

    If it’s a book I also do a word check through the entire document for ‘lazy’ words that might slip in eg. very, little, big, good, great – whatever ones I think I may have let go without noticing. I don’t remove or change all, but I try to ‘upgrade’ a number of them.

  2. Carolyn Nessen says:
    January 3, 2012 at 12:41 pm

    Once you have proofread your work, go back through it beginning with the last page and proofread backwards. You’ll be surprised at wahat you find when you do this.

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

*

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

  • Publishing Leads & Tips






    * First Name
    * E-mail
    Learn More
  • Become A Client

  • Author Websites

  • Be Our Friend On Goodreads

  • Like Us On Facebook

  • All A-Twitter

  • Popular Posts

    • Funny Metaphor And Simile Contest: So Bad, They're Good! 55 comment(s)
    • Editors and Literary Agents: Why They’re Just Not That Into You 31 comment(s)
    • How Much Money Can I Make Writing Poems, Short Stories, Novels, Essays, And Nonfiction Books? 20 comment(s)
    • TMI: A List Of Things NOT To Say In Your Query and Cover Letters 19 comment(s)
    • Fiction Or Nonfiction? Memoir Or Novel? Know What To Call Your Story Or Book 14 comment(s)
    • How To Pick The Right Names For Your Characters 14 comment(s)
    • Jealousy And Writers: Tips To Beat The Green-Eyed Monster 13 comment(s)
    • How To Publish A Poetry Book, Chapbook, Or Collection Of Poems 9 comment(s)
    • To Print Pub or E-Pub? Tis NOT The Question! 9 comment(s)
    • Six Questions To Ask Yourself Before You Enter A Writing Contest 9 comment(s)

© 2011 Writer’s Relief, Inc.

409 South River Street
Hackensack, NJ 07601
(201) 641-3003
(866) 405-3003 (toll-free)
(201) 641-1253 (fax)

Admin

  • Log in
  • Entries RSS
  • Comments RSS
  • WordPress.org

Thank You!

Thanks for dropping by! Feel free to join the discussion by leaving comments, and stay updated by subscribing to the RSS feed.
PageLines by PageLines