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Rewriting

Comprehensive notes, formulas, and practice questions for Rewriting.

Rewriting

Rewriting

What you'll learn

  • How rewriting transforms sentences or passages for clarity, concision, tone, or grammatical correctness.
  • To apply prescribed transformations: passive/active, reported speech, combine/split, formal register.
  • To preserve original meaning unless question explicitly allows creative change.
  • To excel at Class 12 rewriting tasks in grammar and writing sections.

Key concepts

Level 1 — Foundations

Verbal: Rewriting changes how something is said while keeping what is said (unless transformation instructions say otherwise).

Common transformation types:

InstructionAction
Make conciseRemove redundancy, merge phrases
Change to passiveObject → subject; by-agent optional
Report speechBackshift tense; change pronouns/deixis
FormaliseLatinate → simpler formal diction; expand contractions
CombineTwo sentences → one complex/compound

Meaning preservation checklist: Same actors, same time, same polarity (negation), same quantifiers (all/some).

Level 2 — Exam depth

Reported speech shifts: "I will come" → He said he would come. "Here" → there. "Tomorrow" → the next day.

Concision: "Due to the fact that" → "because"; "in the event that" → "if."

Nominalisation (formal): "We decided to expand" → "The decision was made to expand" — use when question asks formal passive style.

Split for clarity: One overloaded sentence → two — valid if question says "rewrite for clarity."

Exam: Follow exact instruction word — "one sentence only" vs "not more than eight words" changes strategy.

Worked example

Rewrite to reported speech

Direct: Rahul said, "I cannot finish the report today because my laptop crashed yesterday."
Reported: Rahul said that **he could not finish the report that day because his laptop had crashed the previous day**.
Tense backshift + time/deixis shift applied.

Concise rewrite

Wordy: "In spite of the fact that the weather was bad, the event was postponed."
Concise: "**Because the weather was bad, the event was postponed.**" (or "Bad weather caused the event's postponement.")
Meaning preserved; word count reduced.

Common mistakes

MistakeWhy it happensFix
Meaning shift in reported speechForgot negation or timeCheck polarity and adverbs
Over-shortening loses key infoAggressive deletionKeep all factual elements
Wrong transformation typePassive when asked activeUnderline instruction verb
Informal tone in formal rewriteContractions remainExpand don't, can't; avoid slang

Quick check

  • List three rewriting instruction types from exams.
  • Rewrite: "She said, 'I am waiting for you here.'" → reported speech.
  • Make concise: "At this point in time we are not able to comply."
  • Stretch: Active ↔ passive without changing meaning — try one pair.

Revision tip: Revisit adjacent topics in Error Correction before mixed practice on Rewriting.

Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Rewriting.

Exam strategy

Circle the instruction verb (report, formalise, combine, shorten) and tick off meaning-preservation checks after rewriting. Reported-speech items: list tense, pronoun, time, place shifts on margin before writing. Word-limit rewrites reward aggressive deletion of redundancy ("due to the fact that" → "because"). Always read the product sentence once aloud.

Practice connections

Rewriting merges syntax choices with business writing register shifts. Report sentences often originate as informal notes — practise upgrading one informal paragraph to report style weekly. Speech drafts frequently need concision rewrites before delivery. Reported-speech transformations appear in literature dialogue analysis when shifting from direct to indirect quotation — keep tense shift rules consistent across tasks.

Key Takeaways (TL;DR)

  • What you'll learn
  • Key concepts
  • Worked example
  • Common mistakes

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