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  2. Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Titles of works - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Titles_of_works

    Descriptive titles: a reference to or description of a work or part of a work when not using its actual title or conventional name: 137th graduation address, conference keynote speech, an introductory aria, Satie's furniture music, State of the Union address, Nixon's Checkers speech; [d] also: the season finale of Game of Thrones, not the ...

  3. Log line - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Log_line

    A one-sentence program summary in TV Guide is a log line. [2] " A log line is a single sentence describing your entire story," [ 3 ] however, "it is not a straight summary of the project. It goes to the heart of what a project is about in one or two sentences, defining the theme of the project...and suggest[ing] a bigger meaning."

  4. Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo Buffalo ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buffalo_buffalo_Buffalo...

    Reed–Kellogg diagram of the sentence. The sentence is unpunctuated and uses three different readings of the word "buffalo". In order of their first use, these are: a. a city named Buffalo. This is used as a noun adjunct in the sentence; n. the noun buffalo, an animal, in the plural (equivalent to "buffaloes" or "buffalos"), in order to avoid ...

  5. How a single sentence — and a tennis metaphor — can save ...

    www.aol.com/news/single-sentence-tennis-metaphor...

    Well, there is not a single feeling word in there,” Robin says. “Then what you've done is you're over the net. Unless I say I don't care, then you're making up a story based on my behavior.”

  6. Wikipedia:One sentence does not an article make - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:One_sentence...

    Likewise, a single sentence cannot serve as a Wikipedia article or essay. One sentence does not an article make. A single sentence cannot impart sufficient information on a reader on a subject in a significant, meaningful way without it becoming a dictionary definition—and there is a great difference between a dictionary and an encyclopedia.

  7. The Nobel literature prize goes to Norway's Jon Fosse, who ...

    www.aol.com/news/nobel-prize-literature...

    Norwegian writer Jon Fosse, whose work tackles birth, death, faith and the other “elemental stuff” of life in spare Nordic prose, won the Nobel Prize for Literature on Thursday for writing ...

  8. Longest English sentence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Longest_English_sentence

    Ducks, Newburyport by Lucy Ellmann, a finalist for the 2019 Booker Prize, runs more than a thousand pages, mostly consisting of a single sentence that is 426,100 words long [8] This Book Is the Longest Sentence Ever Written and Then Published (2020), by humor writer Dave Cowen, consists of one sentence that runs for 111,111 words, and is a ...

  9. Wikipedia:Close paraphrasing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Close_paraphrasing

    A close paraphrase of one sentence from a book may be of low concern, while a close paraphrase of one paragraph of a two-paragraph article might be considered a serious violation. Editors must therefore take particular care when writing an article, or a section of an article, that has much the same scope as a single source.