If this was confusing, I mean succeeded at holding on to their faith through apologetics. If you understood that and are wondering why they’re different… I don’t know.
If you can point me towards other typos & grammatical slips that would be helpful. I generally try to proofread my work but I’m a terrible proofreader.
A proofreading trick I use sometimes: Touch each individual word as you read it (with a physical pointer like a pen or with the mouse pointer). For even greater accuracy, read aloud while you’re doing this.
A proofreading trick I have not used much: Make a printout and read it upside down.
Edit:
Proofreading with a bigger font makes it easier to catch stuff like “assume” versus “assure”. A serif font makes the difference between “I” and “l” visible. In a fixed-width font (e.g. Courier New) all the characters are the same width, so spelling and punctuation errors are easier to see (compare “rn”/”m” versus “rn”/”m″).
If this was confusing, I mean succeeded at holding on to their faith through apologetics. If you understood that and are wondering why they’re different… I don’t know.
If you can point me towards other typos & grammatical slips that would be helpful. I generally try to proofread my work but I’m a terrible proofreader.
A proofreading trick I use sometimes: Touch each individual word as you read it (with a physical pointer like a pen or with the mouse pointer). For even greater accuracy, read aloud while you’re doing this.
A proofreading trick I have not used much: Make a printout and read it upside down.
Edit:
Proofreading with a bigger font makes it easier to catch stuff like “assume” versus “assure”. A serif font makes the difference between “I” and “l” visible. In a fixed-width font (e.g. Courier New) all the characters are the same width, so spelling and punctuation errors are easier to see (compare “rn”/”m” versus “
rn
”/”m
″).