Obioma, thanks for your interest in attending our legal-writing workshop. You can fill our Online Registration Form here: http://writehouse.org/legal-training/online-registration-form/ . We will send you details of our October and November workshops once the flyers are ready.
Thanks for your interest in our workshops. We organized a legal-writing workshop in Abuja in March 2014. We will be happy to organize another workshop in Abuja in 2015 once we have more interested persons from Abuja and environs. Please contact us through our online contact form if you would like to work with us to bring our workshops to Abuja. Thanks.
Thank you so much for that priceless gift for the year 2015. For me, it is a useful guide for effective legal drafting. It is a wonderful idea to begin the year 2015 in simplicity, flexibility and comprehension. Enough of verbosity, showmanship and pretensions. Happy New Year!
This is such welcome knowledge. We take so much for granted in our everyday writings without realising the unintended effects.
Thank you for sharing these.
Plain English is easy to read and understand. It is sad that most principals insist that pompous lexicon is used particularly in agreements and written addresses.
Thank you, Ezegwui. We’re happy you love the work we are doing at The Write House. The training fee is for lecture materials and feeding. If you have any more questions or need more information, please let us know.
the correction makes for precision,simplicity and conciseness of a write up.it shades unecessary weight from a write up .i recommend that all the law reports past and present be scrutinized and relieved of the legalese.it is apt to move our legal writing ferward.
I am certain that the reason for the court in asking whether a woman is Mrs or Ms is not to determine her marital status, it’s basically to assist the court note for record purposes that the person appearing before her is a lady. Esq only applies to the men and it’s easy for the court to either write Esq after the man’s name or Mr. If it were that simple when a lady appears then there would be no need for the court to ask whether it’s a Ms or Mrs because certainly both titles have different meaning and certainty of issues is a must for any judge.
Colons and semicolons—unlike periods and commas—following closing quotation marks; question marks and exclamation points follow closing quotation marks unless they belong within the quoted matter.
Legal English UK is considering an alternative test to TOLES. We like the exam but feel it could be improved. We would welcome comments via email or via the website http://www.legalenglish.co.uk.
i will love to attend one of your lectures.
Obioma, thanks for your interest in attending our legal-writing workshop. You can fill our Online Registration Form here: http://writehouse.org/legal-training/online-registration-form/ . We will send you details of our October and November workshops once the flyers are ready.
When are you going to start having these workshops in Abuja?
Thanks for your interest in our workshops. We organized a legal-writing workshop in Abuja in March 2014. We will be happy to organize another workshop in Abuja in 2015 once we have more interested persons from Abuja and environs. Please contact us through our online contact form if you would like to work with us to bring our workshops to Abuja. Thanks.
Newsletter
Good day to you
I sincerely appreciate the added knowledge, bestowed on my humble self.
Thank you.
You’re welcome, Abimbola. Thanks for your comment.
The plain English Language is better. There is no need mystifying the legal language.
Thanks for your comment, Austin.
Thank you so much for that priceless gift for the year 2015. For me, it is a useful guide for effective legal drafting. It is a wonderful idea to begin the year 2015 in simplicity, flexibility and comprehension. Enough of verbosity, showmanship and pretensions. Happy New Year!
This is such welcome knowledge. We take so much for granted in our everyday writings without realising the unintended effects.
Thank you for sharing these.
Plain English is easy to read and understand. It is sad that most principals insist that pompous lexicon is used particularly in agreements and written addresses.
Thank you. Now I can confidently use the serial comma.
You’re welcome, Shelley. Please share this article (and other contents you found useful) with your colleagues as well. Thank you.
I love your work. In this coming training is the fee for Accommodation, feeding and lectures.?
Thank you, Ezegwui. We’re happy you love the work we are doing at The Write House. The training fee is for lecture materials and feeding. If you have any more questions or need more information, please let us know.
This is very enlightening.
Thanks for your comment, Elizabeth. We’re happy you found this article enlightening. Please share with your friends and colleagues.
Hmmmm food for thought.
Thanks for this interesting lecture. .
It is well appreciated
You’re welcome, Victoria. You can use the social-media buttons below the article to share.
Congratulations to Write House.
Thanks Elizabeth. We hope you plan to participate in our learned-writing programs. If you’ve any questions, we’ll be happy to help.
Excellent post! We are linking to this particularly great content on our site.
Keep up the great writing.
I’am still waiting for your respond about TOLES,I’am now in Sudan,how do I do.
Shamsuddin, thanks for your interest in TOLES. We’ve replied to your enquiry. Please check your email box.
the correction makes for precision,simplicity and conciseness of a write up.it shades unecessary weight from a write up .i recommend that all the law reports past and present be scrutinized and relieved of the legalese.it is apt to move our legal writing ferward.
Gloria, thanks for your comment and recommendation that our law reporters apply our law-reporting model. Please share this piece with your colleagues.
The newsletter is very educating. I would like to get more of it monthly. Thanks a million for this rare privilege.
Charles, thanks for your comment. We’re happy you find our newsletter educating. You’ve been subscribed. You’ll receive future editions from us.
I am certain that the reason for the court in asking whether a woman is Mrs or Ms is not to determine her marital status, it’s basically to assist the court note for record purposes that the person appearing before her is a lady. Esq only applies to the men and it’s easy for the court to either write Esq after the man’s name or Mr. If it were that simple when a lady appears then there would be no need for the court to ask whether it’s a Ms or Mrs because certainly both titles have different meaning and certainty of issues is a must for any judge.
you guys are doing a good job at the Write House
I love to part of your intellectual community
It’s really an interesting area that one should exploit. Don’t mind the cost. mind the benefit.
Thank you for your comment, Shehu. We look forward to your participation in Briefwriting Masterclass. Have you registered?
Ftte
In British English, vs should not have a full stop because it ends in the final letter of versus .
Colons and semicolons—unlike periods and commas—following closing quotation marks; question marks and exclamation points follow closing quotation marks unless they belong within the quoted matter.
Thank you so much.
Your lecture should be broad on the spectrum of recent legal authorities. However you have started well. Keep it up and keep improving.
Congratulations on this.
Legal English UK is considering an alternative test to TOLES. We like the exam but feel it could be improved. We would welcome comments via email or via the website http://www.legalenglish.co.uk.
Good page. Congratulations again.
Awesome…