home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!haven.umd.edu!darwin.sura.net!mips!swrinde!cs.utexas.edu!torn!cunews!nrcnet0!bnrgate!bcrka451!cadnews
- From: nadeau@bnr.ca (Rheal Nadeau)
- Newsgroups: misc.writing
- Subject: Re: Charactor Titles
- Message-ID: <1992Aug12.181748.25485@bcrka451.bnr.ca>
- Date: 12 Aug 92 18:17:48 GMT
- References: <1992Aug11.183335.25640@pellns.alleg.edu>
- Sender: 5E00 Corkstown News Server
- Organization: Bell-Northern Research Ltd., Ottawa, Canada
- Lines: 51
-
- In article <1992Aug11.183335.25640@pellns.alleg.edu> frisinv@carr100.alleg.edu (Vincent Frisina) writes:
- >I don't know if this belongs here, but since it is for a story why not?
- >What are the proper addresses for:
- > 1. High Priest/Priestess
- > 2. Emperor/Empress
- > 3. Duke, duchess, count, countess...
- > 4. shogun
- > 5. samurai
-
- I won't answer this question directly (I don't know all the answers
- anyway). I do want to make a point, though.
-
- I find that, in general, people just don't know how to look things up.
- This is bad enough in the general populations, but we writers (or
- would-be writers) should be more literate than that. (The number of
- times I have seen people ask questions in USENET groups that could have
- been answered by looking in the dictionary, or by looking up the
- relevant source of information in the phone book and calling them up.
- You want to know something about Switzerland? Well, do you have a
- Swiss Embassy or Consulate in your town?)
-
- In this case, I look at the back of my Webster's New Collegiate
- Dictionary, and near the back (in A Handbook of Style), there is a
- section on Forms of Address. Amazing what you can find in a standard
- dictionary - have you leafed through yours to find out all the types of
- information it offers?
-
- Beyond this, there's a world of information out there - wander over to
- the nearest library or bookstore and check things out. Doing one's
- research may be a bit more work than just asking in public forums, but
- it's usually worth it (I usually discover more than I was looking for,
- and the extra is worth the effort).
-
- An example: I am planning a story which starts in the local Art
- Museum, near a particular statue - a Rodin nude. So I visited the
- Museum to check out the layout; while I was there, I noticed a few
- paintings nearby that will be useful in my story. Then, in a
- bookstore, I picked up a book about Rodin, checked the entry for this
- statue, and learned another useful tidbit that will come in useful as a
- detail in the story (the statue was controversial when it came out -
- not because it was a nude, but because it was so realistic that Rodin
- was accused of making a mold directly from the model, rather than
- sculpting it himself).
-
- One rule of writing, of course, is Write What You Know. Maybe it
- would be more useful to think of this as: Know What You Write.
-
- So in brief - look it up, folks. Remember, getting there is half
- the fun!
-
- The Rhealist - Rheal Nadeau - nadeau@bnr.ca - Speaking only for myself
-