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Should you avoid redundant information after dialogue?


How to make a debate/discussion between characters less dry?Capitalisation after punctuation in dialoguePitfalls for writing a talkative character?Capitalization after interrupted dialogueShould you avoid offensive hyperbole?How to avoid pages of dialogue?Could the cast of my book be more unique?When should the dialogue reference be written, before or after the dialogue?Using ”as” after dialogue tags






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18

















Should we avoid repeating redundant information after a dialogue and is there a way around this? Sometimes, you feel prompted to write the description of an action that follows a line, but that also seems to be redundant, and it leads to some pretty bad prose. How would you work around this?



For example:




"Here's the chip in question." he said as he handed the chip to him.
"It's a very old chip, make sure you take care of it."




Sounds redundant, but the fact he's handing it is also important somewhat, or can be important for what may follow. What would you do in this situation?










share|improve this question























  • 1





    Would you say, "Here's the chip in question. It's a very old chip", or would you say, "Here's the chip in question. It's very old"? That's the answer.

    – RonJohn
    Jul 13 at 15:57











  • Any time I attempt trimming down on redundancy in my writing, I just think back to William Gibson's writing in Neuromancer. What concise yet rich language that author has!

    – BMF
    Jul 13 at 20:14






  • 1





    @RonJohn "Here you go," he said as he handed <name> the chip. "It's very old. Make sure you take care of it."

    – some_guy632
    Jul 14 at 6:04


















18

















Should we avoid repeating redundant information after a dialogue and is there a way around this? Sometimes, you feel prompted to write the description of an action that follows a line, but that also seems to be redundant, and it leads to some pretty bad prose. How would you work around this?



For example:




"Here's the chip in question." he said as he handed the chip to him.
"It's a very old chip, make sure you take care of it."




Sounds redundant, but the fact he's handing it is also important somewhat, or can be important for what may follow. What would you do in this situation?










share|improve this question























  • 1





    Would you say, "Here's the chip in question. It's a very old chip", or would you say, "Here's the chip in question. It's very old"? That's the answer.

    – RonJohn
    Jul 13 at 15:57











  • Any time I attempt trimming down on redundancy in my writing, I just think back to William Gibson's writing in Neuromancer. What concise yet rich language that author has!

    – BMF
    Jul 13 at 20:14






  • 1





    @RonJohn "Here you go," he said as he handed <name> the chip. "It's very old. Make sure you take care of it."

    – some_guy632
    Jul 14 at 6:04














18












18








18


3






Should we avoid repeating redundant information after a dialogue and is there a way around this? Sometimes, you feel prompted to write the description of an action that follows a line, but that also seems to be redundant, and it leads to some pretty bad prose. How would you work around this?



For example:




"Here's the chip in question." he said as he handed the chip to him.
"It's a very old chip, make sure you take care of it."




Sounds redundant, but the fact he's handing it is also important somewhat, or can be important for what may follow. What would you do in this situation?










share|improve this question

















Should we avoid repeating redundant information after a dialogue and is there a way around this? Sometimes, you feel prompted to write the description of an action that follows a line, but that also seems to be redundant, and it leads to some pretty bad prose. How would you work around this?



For example:




"Here's the chip in question." he said as he handed the chip to him.
"It's a very old chip, make sure you take care of it."




Sounds redundant, but the fact he's handing it is also important somewhat, or can be important for what may follow. What would you do in this situation?







creative-writing dialogue






share|improve this question
















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jul 14 at 0:13









Cyn says reinstate Monica

30.8k4 gold badges68 silver badges139 bronze badges




30.8k4 gold badges68 silver badges139 bronze badges










asked Jul 12 at 2:10









blackbirdblackbird

1,5217 silver badges30 bronze badges




1,5217 silver badges30 bronze badges










  • 1





    Would you say, "Here's the chip in question. It's a very old chip", or would you say, "Here's the chip in question. It's very old"? That's the answer.

    – RonJohn
    Jul 13 at 15:57











  • Any time I attempt trimming down on redundancy in my writing, I just think back to William Gibson's writing in Neuromancer. What concise yet rich language that author has!

    – BMF
    Jul 13 at 20:14






  • 1





    @RonJohn "Here you go," he said as he handed <name> the chip. "It's very old. Make sure you take care of it."

    – some_guy632
    Jul 14 at 6:04













  • 1





    Would you say, "Here's the chip in question. It's a very old chip", or would you say, "Here's the chip in question. It's very old"? That's the answer.

    – RonJohn
    Jul 13 at 15:57











  • Any time I attempt trimming down on redundancy in my writing, I just think back to William Gibson's writing in Neuromancer. What concise yet rich language that author has!

    – BMF
    Jul 13 at 20:14






  • 1





    @RonJohn "Here you go," he said as he handed <name> the chip. "It's very old. Make sure you take care of it."

    – some_guy632
    Jul 14 at 6:04








1




1





Would you say, "Here's the chip in question. It's a very old chip", or would you say, "Here's the chip in question. It's very old"? That's the answer.

– RonJohn
Jul 13 at 15:57





Would you say, "Here's the chip in question. It's a very old chip", or would you say, "Here's the chip in question. It's very old"? That's the answer.

– RonJohn
Jul 13 at 15:57













Any time I attempt trimming down on redundancy in my writing, I just think back to William Gibson's writing in Neuromancer. What concise yet rich language that author has!

– BMF
Jul 13 at 20:14





Any time I attempt trimming down on redundancy in my writing, I just think back to William Gibson's writing in Neuromancer. What concise yet rich language that author has!

– BMF
Jul 13 at 20:14




1




1





@RonJohn "Here you go," he said as he handed <name> the chip. "It's very old. Make sure you take care of it."

– some_guy632
Jul 14 at 6:04






@RonJohn "Here you go," he said as he handed <name> the chip. "It's very old. Make sure you take care of it."

– some_guy632
Jul 14 at 6:04











6 Answers
6






active

oldest

votes


















22


















Should you avoid redundancy?



Yes.



How do you get around this?



Cut the redundant part and show only the new information.
Infinitezero has already given a good example on that.




"Here's the chip in question." He pulled it out from his pocket with slow, deliberate gestures. He gave out the impression of an elephant trying to move bohemian crystal around. "It's a very old one, make sure you take care of it".




As you can see, I've omitted "he said", since here it can be implied neatly.
If there's nothing new to tell, you don't have to make it up:




"Here's the chip in question." He said. "It's a very old one, make sure you take care of it".




Here the pause is still effective, since it cuts the dialogue lines. The lack of further information leaves the reader imagining the chip being passed.






share|improve this answer























  • 4





    You could also come from the other person's perspective: "... make sure you take care of it." -> Jim took the package and carefully stowed it in his Acme Supperr Secure LokBox.

    – Cullub
    Jul 12 at 20:04







  • 1





    I think it should be "Here's the chip in question." He pulled it out from his pocket with slow, deliberate gestures.

    – Acccumulation
    Jul 15 at 18:54











  • @Acccumulation Noted.

    – Reinstate Monica.
    Jul 15 at 22:34


















30


















Why don't you paraphrase the action? Say what he is literally doing. How does he give the chip? Is it in an envelope? Does he extend his arm? Is he tossing it? ....




"Here's the chip in question" he said as he passed him the sealed envelope, making sure [Jack] had a firm grip on it before he let go. "It's a very old one, make sure you take care of it.







share|improve this answer





















  • 5





    Key point to note here seems to be to highlight the difference between "repeating redundant information" to the reader, and instead expanding on the information presented to the reader, and reinforcing the information. - "Can this be reworded to add more detail or important information about what is going on?" [Just keep in mind that at times, less is still more.]

    – TheLuckless
    Jul 12 at 17:42


















12


















Just get rid of the redundancies, and it will sound fine.




Original: "Here's the chip in question." he said as he handed to chip to him. "It's a very old chip, make sure you take care of it."



Revised: "Here's the chip in question," he said, as he handed it to him, "It's very old, make sure you take care of it."




You don't have to repeat "chip" every time. An alternative is to name the object second:




Revised: "This is the one," he said, handing him an anti-stat bag holding a chip. "It's very old, make sure you take care of it."







share|improve this answer

































    3


















    Redundancy is good, but in writing it is better to re-phrase than to repeat. Repeating is ok in dialog, as long as that is just how that character speaks, but outside dialog you should check if you are repeating any words, and try to avoid that. If you need to, walk away for a day and re-read it to see if anything sounds weird/off.




    "Here's the chip in question." he said as he handed it to me. "It's a very old chip, make sure you take care of it."




    (He and Him imply the same person in this context, so will confuse some readers on first read through)






    share|improve this answer

































      2


















      In the palm of his hand was an old, rugged chip. As he extended his arm towards me he said: "It's very old. Take good care of it."



      Don't know if this helps, but this is what I would make of it. :-) Redundancy in writing is for me as a reader really annoying.






      share|improve this answer

































        1


















        Redundancy is neither good nor bad. It either works for you or doesn't. In your brief lines, you have a lot of redundancy that, not knowing the context, can probably be removed without sacrificing understandability.




        "Here's the chip. It's very old so make sure you take care of it."




        "In question" isn't needed. The handing over of the chip isn't needed; it's implied with "here's the chip" and in the next sentence the other character will pocket it so it's clear that he has it.



        Seems to me that there's no need to linger on that sentence any longer than that. Just pass the coin and get on with the story.






        share|improve this answer



























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          6 Answers
          6






          active

          oldest

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          6 Answers
          6






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          22


















          Should you avoid redundancy?



          Yes.



          How do you get around this?



          Cut the redundant part and show only the new information.
          Infinitezero has already given a good example on that.




          "Here's the chip in question." He pulled it out from his pocket with slow, deliberate gestures. He gave out the impression of an elephant trying to move bohemian crystal around. "It's a very old one, make sure you take care of it".




          As you can see, I've omitted "he said", since here it can be implied neatly.
          If there's nothing new to tell, you don't have to make it up:




          "Here's the chip in question." He said. "It's a very old one, make sure you take care of it".




          Here the pause is still effective, since it cuts the dialogue lines. The lack of further information leaves the reader imagining the chip being passed.






          share|improve this answer























          • 4





            You could also come from the other person's perspective: "... make sure you take care of it." -> Jim took the package and carefully stowed it in his Acme Supperr Secure LokBox.

            – Cullub
            Jul 12 at 20:04







          • 1





            I think it should be "Here's the chip in question." He pulled it out from his pocket with slow, deliberate gestures.

            – Acccumulation
            Jul 15 at 18:54











          • @Acccumulation Noted.

            – Reinstate Monica.
            Jul 15 at 22:34















          22


















          Should you avoid redundancy?



          Yes.



          How do you get around this?



          Cut the redundant part and show only the new information.
          Infinitezero has already given a good example on that.




          "Here's the chip in question." He pulled it out from his pocket with slow, deliberate gestures. He gave out the impression of an elephant trying to move bohemian crystal around. "It's a very old one, make sure you take care of it".




          As you can see, I've omitted "he said", since here it can be implied neatly.
          If there's nothing new to tell, you don't have to make it up:




          "Here's the chip in question." He said. "It's a very old one, make sure you take care of it".




          Here the pause is still effective, since it cuts the dialogue lines. The lack of further information leaves the reader imagining the chip being passed.






          share|improve this answer























          • 4





            You could also come from the other person's perspective: "... make sure you take care of it." -> Jim took the package and carefully stowed it in his Acme Supperr Secure LokBox.

            – Cullub
            Jul 12 at 20:04







          • 1





            I think it should be "Here's the chip in question." He pulled it out from his pocket with slow, deliberate gestures.

            – Acccumulation
            Jul 15 at 18:54











          • @Acccumulation Noted.

            – Reinstate Monica.
            Jul 15 at 22:34













          22














          22










          22









          Should you avoid redundancy?



          Yes.



          How do you get around this?



          Cut the redundant part and show only the new information.
          Infinitezero has already given a good example on that.




          "Here's the chip in question." He pulled it out from his pocket with slow, deliberate gestures. He gave out the impression of an elephant trying to move bohemian crystal around. "It's a very old one, make sure you take care of it".




          As you can see, I've omitted "he said", since here it can be implied neatly.
          If there's nothing new to tell, you don't have to make it up:




          "Here's the chip in question." He said. "It's a very old one, make sure you take care of it".




          Here the pause is still effective, since it cuts the dialogue lines. The lack of further information leaves the reader imagining the chip being passed.






          share|improve this answer
















          Should you avoid redundancy?



          Yes.



          How do you get around this?



          Cut the redundant part and show only the new information.
          Infinitezero has already given a good example on that.




          "Here's the chip in question." He pulled it out from his pocket with slow, deliberate gestures. He gave out the impression of an elephant trying to move bohemian crystal around. "It's a very old one, make sure you take care of it".




          As you can see, I've omitted "he said", since here it can be implied neatly.
          If there's nothing new to tell, you don't have to make it up:




          "Here's the chip in question." He said. "It's a very old one, make sure you take care of it".




          Here the pause is still effective, since it cuts the dialogue lines. The lack of further information leaves the reader imagining the chip being passed.







          share|improve this answer















          share|improve this answer




          share|improve this answer








          edited Jul 15 at 22:35

























          answered Jul 12 at 8:46









          Reinstate Monica.Reinstate Monica.

          12.9k3 gold badges39 silver badges106 bronze badges




          12.9k3 gold badges39 silver badges106 bronze badges










          • 4





            You could also come from the other person's perspective: "... make sure you take care of it." -> Jim took the package and carefully stowed it in his Acme Supperr Secure LokBox.

            – Cullub
            Jul 12 at 20:04







          • 1





            I think it should be "Here's the chip in question." He pulled it out from his pocket with slow, deliberate gestures.

            – Acccumulation
            Jul 15 at 18:54











          • @Acccumulation Noted.

            – Reinstate Monica.
            Jul 15 at 22:34












          • 4





            You could also come from the other person's perspective: "... make sure you take care of it." -> Jim took the package and carefully stowed it in his Acme Supperr Secure LokBox.

            – Cullub
            Jul 12 at 20:04







          • 1





            I think it should be "Here's the chip in question." He pulled it out from his pocket with slow, deliberate gestures.

            – Acccumulation
            Jul 15 at 18:54











          • @Acccumulation Noted.

            – Reinstate Monica.
            Jul 15 at 22:34







          4




          4





          You could also come from the other person's perspective: "... make sure you take care of it." -> Jim took the package and carefully stowed it in his Acme Supperr Secure LokBox.

          – Cullub
          Jul 12 at 20:04






          You could also come from the other person's perspective: "... make sure you take care of it." -> Jim took the package and carefully stowed it in his Acme Supperr Secure LokBox.

          – Cullub
          Jul 12 at 20:04





          1




          1





          I think it should be "Here's the chip in question." He pulled it out from his pocket with slow, deliberate gestures.

          – Acccumulation
          Jul 15 at 18:54





          I think it should be "Here's the chip in question." He pulled it out from his pocket with slow, deliberate gestures.

          – Acccumulation
          Jul 15 at 18:54













          @Acccumulation Noted.

          – Reinstate Monica.
          Jul 15 at 22:34





          @Acccumulation Noted.

          – Reinstate Monica.
          Jul 15 at 22:34













          30


















          Why don't you paraphrase the action? Say what he is literally doing. How does he give the chip? Is it in an envelope? Does he extend his arm? Is he tossing it? ....




          "Here's the chip in question" he said as he passed him the sealed envelope, making sure [Jack] had a firm grip on it before he let go. "It's a very old one, make sure you take care of it.







          share|improve this answer





















          • 5





            Key point to note here seems to be to highlight the difference between "repeating redundant information" to the reader, and instead expanding on the information presented to the reader, and reinforcing the information. - "Can this be reworded to add more detail or important information about what is going on?" [Just keep in mind that at times, less is still more.]

            – TheLuckless
            Jul 12 at 17:42















          30


















          Why don't you paraphrase the action? Say what he is literally doing. How does he give the chip? Is it in an envelope? Does he extend his arm? Is he tossing it? ....




          "Here's the chip in question" he said as he passed him the sealed envelope, making sure [Jack] had a firm grip on it before he let go. "It's a very old one, make sure you take care of it.







          share|improve this answer





















          • 5





            Key point to note here seems to be to highlight the difference between "repeating redundant information" to the reader, and instead expanding on the information presented to the reader, and reinforcing the information. - "Can this be reworded to add more detail or important information about what is going on?" [Just keep in mind that at times, less is still more.]

            – TheLuckless
            Jul 12 at 17:42













          30














          30










          30









          Why don't you paraphrase the action? Say what he is literally doing. How does he give the chip? Is it in an envelope? Does he extend his arm? Is he tossing it? ....




          "Here's the chip in question" he said as he passed him the sealed envelope, making sure [Jack] had a firm grip on it before he let go. "It's a very old one, make sure you take care of it.







          share|improve this answer














          Why don't you paraphrase the action? Say what he is literally doing. How does he give the chip? Is it in an envelope? Does he extend his arm? Is he tossing it? ....




          "Here's the chip in question" he said as he passed him the sealed envelope, making sure [Jack] had a firm grip on it before he let go. "It's a very old one, make sure you take care of it.








          share|improve this answer













          share|improve this answer




          share|improve this answer










          answered Jul 12 at 6:04









          infinitezeroinfinitezero

          3812 silver badges6 bronze badges




          3812 silver badges6 bronze badges










          • 5





            Key point to note here seems to be to highlight the difference between "repeating redundant information" to the reader, and instead expanding on the information presented to the reader, and reinforcing the information. - "Can this be reworded to add more detail or important information about what is going on?" [Just keep in mind that at times, less is still more.]

            – TheLuckless
            Jul 12 at 17:42












          • 5





            Key point to note here seems to be to highlight the difference between "repeating redundant information" to the reader, and instead expanding on the information presented to the reader, and reinforcing the information. - "Can this be reworded to add more detail or important information about what is going on?" [Just keep in mind that at times, less is still more.]

            – TheLuckless
            Jul 12 at 17:42







          5




          5





          Key point to note here seems to be to highlight the difference between "repeating redundant information" to the reader, and instead expanding on the information presented to the reader, and reinforcing the information. - "Can this be reworded to add more detail or important information about what is going on?" [Just keep in mind that at times, less is still more.]

          – TheLuckless
          Jul 12 at 17:42





          Key point to note here seems to be to highlight the difference between "repeating redundant information" to the reader, and instead expanding on the information presented to the reader, and reinforcing the information. - "Can this be reworded to add more detail or important information about what is going on?" [Just keep in mind that at times, less is still more.]

          – TheLuckless
          Jul 12 at 17:42











          12


















          Just get rid of the redundancies, and it will sound fine.




          Original: "Here's the chip in question." he said as he handed to chip to him. "It's a very old chip, make sure you take care of it."



          Revised: "Here's the chip in question," he said, as he handed it to him, "It's very old, make sure you take care of it."




          You don't have to repeat "chip" every time. An alternative is to name the object second:




          Revised: "This is the one," he said, handing him an anti-stat bag holding a chip. "It's very old, make sure you take care of it."







          share|improve this answer






























            12


















            Just get rid of the redundancies, and it will sound fine.




            Original: "Here's the chip in question." he said as he handed to chip to him. "It's a very old chip, make sure you take care of it."



            Revised: "Here's the chip in question," he said, as he handed it to him, "It's very old, make sure you take care of it."




            You don't have to repeat "chip" every time. An alternative is to name the object second:




            Revised: "This is the one," he said, handing him an anti-stat bag holding a chip. "It's very old, make sure you take care of it."







            share|improve this answer




























              12














              12










              12









              Just get rid of the redundancies, and it will sound fine.




              Original: "Here's the chip in question." he said as he handed to chip to him. "It's a very old chip, make sure you take care of it."



              Revised: "Here's the chip in question," he said, as he handed it to him, "It's very old, make sure you take care of it."




              You don't have to repeat "chip" every time. An alternative is to name the object second:




              Revised: "This is the one," he said, handing him an anti-stat bag holding a chip. "It's very old, make sure you take care of it."







              share|improve this answer














              Just get rid of the redundancies, and it will sound fine.




              Original: "Here's the chip in question." he said as he handed to chip to him. "It's a very old chip, make sure you take care of it."



              Revised: "Here's the chip in question," he said, as he handed it to him, "It's very old, make sure you take care of it."




              You don't have to repeat "chip" every time. An alternative is to name the object second:




              Revised: "This is the one," he said, handing him an anti-stat bag holding a chip. "It's very old, make sure you take care of it."








              share|improve this answer













              share|improve this answer




              share|improve this answer










              answered Jul 12 at 19:44









              Amadeus-Reinstate-MonicaAmadeus-Reinstate-Monica

              80.2k7 gold badges108 silver badges261 bronze badges




              80.2k7 gold badges108 silver badges261 bronze badges
























                  3


















                  Redundancy is good, but in writing it is better to re-phrase than to repeat. Repeating is ok in dialog, as long as that is just how that character speaks, but outside dialog you should check if you are repeating any words, and try to avoid that. If you need to, walk away for a day and re-read it to see if anything sounds weird/off.




                  "Here's the chip in question." he said as he handed it to me. "It's a very old chip, make sure you take care of it."




                  (He and Him imply the same person in this context, so will confuse some readers on first read through)






                  share|improve this answer






























                    3


















                    Redundancy is good, but in writing it is better to re-phrase than to repeat. Repeating is ok in dialog, as long as that is just how that character speaks, but outside dialog you should check if you are repeating any words, and try to avoid that. If you need to, walk away for a day and re-read it to see if anything sounds weird/off.




                    "Here's the chip in question." he said as he handed it to me. "It's a very old chip, make sure you take care of it."




                    (He and Him imply the same person in this context, so will confuse some readers on first read through)






                    share|improve this answer




























                      3














                      3










                      3









                      Redundancy is good, but in writing it is better to re-phrase than to repeat. Repeating is ok in dialog, as long as that is just how that character speaks, but outside dialog you should check if you are repeating any words, and try to avoid that. If you need to, walk away for a day and re-read it to see if anything sounds weird/off.




                      "Here's the chip in question." he said as he handed it to me. "It's a very old chip, make sure you take care of it."




                      (He and Him imply the same person in this context, so will confuse some readers on first read through)






                      share|improve this answer














                      Redundancy is good, but in writing it is better to re-phrase than to repeat. Repeating is ok in dialog, as long as that is just how that character speaks, but outside dialog you should check if you are repeating any words, and try to avoid that. If you need to, walk away for a day and re-read it to see if anything sounds weird/off.




                      "Here's the chip in question." he said as he handed it to me. "It's a very old chip, make sure you take care of it."




                      (He and Him imply the same person in this context, so will confuse some readers on first read through)







                      share|improve this answer













                      share|improve this answer




                      share|improve this answer










                      answered Jul 12 at 17:16









                      TezraTezra

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                          In the palm of his hand was an old, rugged chip. As he extended his arm towards me he said: "It's very old. Take good care of it."



                          Don't know if this helps, but this is what I would make of it. :-) Redundancy in writing is for me as a reader really annoying.






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                            2


















                            In the palm of his hand was an old, rugged chip. As he extended his arm towards me he said: "It's very old. Take good care of it."



                            Don't know if this helps, but this is what I would make of it. :-) Redundancy in writing is for me as a reader really annoying.






                            share|improve this answer




























                              2














                              2










                              2









                              In the palm of his hand was an old, rugged chip. As he extended his arm towards me he said: "It's very old. Take good care of it."



                              Don't know if this helps, but this is what I would make of it. :-) Redundancy in writing is for me as a reader really annoying.






                              share|improve this answer














                              In the palm of his hand was an old, rugged chip. As he extended his arm towards me he said: "It's very old. Take good care of it."



                              Don't know if this helps, but this is what I would make of it. :-) Redundancy in writing is for me as a reader really annoying.







                              share|improve this answer













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                              answered Jul 14 at 15:50









                              El ViraEl Vira

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                                  Redundancy is neither good nor bad. It either works for you or doesn't. In your brief lines, you have a lot of redundancy that, not knowing the context, can probably be removed without sacrificing understandability.




                                  "Here's the chip. It's very old so make sure you take care of it."




                                  "In question" isn't needed. The handing over of the chip isn't needed; it's implied with "here's the chip" and in the next sentence the other character will pocket it so it's clear that he has it.



                                  Seems to me that there's no need to linger on that sentence any longer than that. Just pass the coin and get on with the story.






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                                    1


















                                    Redundancy is neither good nor bad. It either works for you or doesn't. In your brief lines, you have a lot of redundancy that, not knowing the context, can probably be removed without sacrificing understandability.




                                    "Here's the chip. It's very old so make sure you take care of it."




                                    "In question" isn't needed. The handing over of the chip isn't needed; it's implied with "here's the chip" and in the next sentence the other character will pocket it so it's clear that he has it.



                                    Seems to me that there's no need to linger on that sentence any longer than that. Just pass the coin and get on with the story.






                                    share|improve this answer




























                                      1














                                      1










                                      1









                                      Redundancy is neither good nor bad. It either works for you or doesn't. In your brief lines, you have a lot of redundancy that, not knowing the context, can probably be removed without sacrificing understandability.




                                      "Here's the chip. It's very old so make sure you take care of it."




                                      "In question" isn't needed. The handing over of the chip isn't needed; it's implied with "here's the chip" and in the next sentence the other character will pocket it so it's clear that he has it.



                                      Seems to me that there's no need to linger on that sentence any longer than that. Just pass the coin and get on with the story.






                                      share|improve this answer














                                      Redundancy is neither good nor bad. It either works for you or doesn't. In your brief lines, you have a lot of redundancy that, not knowing the context, can probably be removed without sacrificing understandability.




                                      "Here's the chip. It's very old so make sure you take care of it."




                                      "In question" isn't needed. The handing over of the chip isn't needed; it's implied with "here's the chip" and in the next sentence the other character will pocket it so it's clear that he has it.



                                      Seems to me that there's no need to linger on that sentence any longer than that. Just pass the coin and get on with the story.







                                      share|improve this answer













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                                      answered Jul 15 at 17:16









                                      Ken MohnkernKen Mohnkern

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