The Elements of Style is one of the most famous and durable guides to clear English prose: a concise manual of usage, composition, form, and style built around the practical discipline of saying what needs to be said-and cutting what does not. William Strunk Jr.'s central rules remain direct and memorable: use the active voice, choose definite language, keep related words together, place emphatic words where they will matter, and above all, omit needless words.
First prepared for Strunk's students at Cornell and later known to generations of readers through the expanded Strunk and White edition, this little book became a standard companion for students, teachers, editors, journalists, and writers who wanted a sharp reminder that good prose depends on clarity, order, precision, and restraint. Its advice is brief, prescriptive, sometimes severe, and often bracingly useful: write clean sentences, avoid clutter, respect the reader, and revise until the line carries its weight.
Writers, students, editors, teachers, and anyone who works with English prose will find The Elements of Style a compact classic of practical instruction. It remains useful not because it answers every modern question about usage, but because it insists on habits every writer still needs: attention, economy, structure, and respect for the force of plain language. original 1918 text.