neurofoo

eos-style

35
5
# Install this skill:
npx skills add neurofoo/agent-skills --skill "eos-style"

Install specific skill from multi-skill repository

# Description

Strunk & White style review using the 21 reminders from "Elements of Style" Chapter V. Use when editing prose, reviewing drafts, or improving writing clarity and tone.

# SKILL.md


name: eos-style
description: Strunk & White style review using the 21 reminders from "Elements of Style" Chapter V. Use when editing prose, reviewing drafts, or improving writing clarity and tone.
user-invocable: true


Elements of Style: 21 Style Reminders

Review writing against Strunk & White's 21 style principles from Chapter V "An Approach to Style."

Instructions

Analyze the provided text against each of the 21 style reminders. Focus on actionable feedback with specific examples from the text. Not all principles apply to every pieceβ€”mark N/A when appropriate.

Output Format

Text Under Review: [title or brief description]


Style Review

# Principle Status Notes
1 Place yourself in the background Pass/Needs Work/N/A [specific feedback]
2 Write naturally Pass/Needs Work/N/A [specific feedback]
3 Work from suitable design Pass/Needs Work/N/A [specific feedback]
4 Write with nouns and verbs Pass/Needs Work/N/A [specific feedback]
5 Revise and rewrite Pass/Needs Work/N/A [specific feedback]
6 Don't overwrite Pass/Needs Work/N/A [specific feedback]
7 Don't overstate Pass/Needs Work/N/A [specific feedback]
8 Avoid qualifiers Pass/Needs Work/N/A [specific feedback]
9 Don't affect breeziness Pass/Needs Work/N/A [specific feedback]
10 Use orthodox spelling Pass/Needs Work/N/A [specific feedback]
11 Don't explain too much Pass/Needs Work/N/A [specific feedback]
12 Don't construct awkward adverbs Pass/Needs Work/N/A [specific feedback]
13 Make sure speakers are clear Pass/Needs Work/N/A [specific feedback]
14 Avoid fancy words Pass/Needs Work/N/A [specific feedback]
15 Use dialect sparingly Pass/Needs Work/N/A [specific feedback]
16 Be clear Pass/Needs Work/N/A [specific feedback]
17 Don't inject opinion Pass/Needs Work/N/A [specific feedback]
18 Use figures of speech sparingly Pass/Needs Work/N/A [specific feedback]
19 Don't sacrifice clarity for shortcuts Pass/Needs Work/N/A [specific feedback]
20 Avoid foreign languages Pass/Needs Work/N/A [specific feedback]
21 Prefer standard to offbeat Pass/Needs Work/N/A [specific feedback]

Key Issues Found

High Priority

  • [Issue with specific example and suggested fix]

Medium Priority

  • [Issue with specific example and suggested fix]

Principle Reference

  1. Place yourself in the background β€” Write to serve the reader, not to show off. Style emerges from content, not from the writer's ego.

  2. Write naturally β€” Don't consciously imitate others or force an affected style. Write as you would speak to an intelligent friend.

  3. Work from suitable design β€” Plan your piece. Know your scope and structure before writing extensively.

  4. Write with nouns and verbs β€” These give writing strength. Adjectives and adverbs are not your principal weapons.

  5. Revise and rewrite β€” Good writing is rewriting. Don't expect first drafts to be final.

  6. Don't overwrite β€” Avoid ornate, flowery prose. Rich prose is hard to digest.

  7. Don't overstate β€” Avoid superlatives and exaggeration. A single overstatement can undermine your credibility.

  8. Avoid qualifiers β€” Words like "very," "rather," "quite," "pretty," and "little" weaken prose.

  9. Don't affect breeziness β€” Forced casualness and flip remarks suggest the writer values cleverness over substance.

  10. Use orthodox spelling β€” Follow standard conventions unless you have good reason not to.

  11. Don't explain too much β€” Trust the reader. Avoid excessive adverbs after "said" and over-explanatory dialogue tags.

  12. Don't construct awkward adverbs β€” Avoid forcing "-ly" onto words that don't take it naturally.

  13. Make sure speakers are clear β€” In dialogue, readers must always know who is speaking.

  14. Avoid fancy words β€” Prefer the plain word to the fancy one. "Home" not "domicile."

  15. Use dialect sparingly β€” The best dialect writers use minimal deviation from standard language.

  16. Be clear β€” Clarity is the foundation. Muddiness is not depth; obscurity is not profundity.

  17. Don't inject opinion β€” Keep personal opinions out unless they serve the work. They mark the egoist.

  18. Use figures of speech sparingly β€” Metaphors and similes need space. Constant comparison exhausts the reader.

  19. Don't sacrifice clarity for shortcuts β€” Strong, precise words are better than clever abbreviations.

  20. Avoid foreign languages β€” Write in English. Foreign phrases can seem pretentious.

  21. Prefer standard to offbeat β€” Choose established words over trendy or invented ones.


Summary

Overall Assessment: [Strong/Needs Revision/Major Issues]

Top 3 Improvements:
1. [Most impactful change]
2. [Second priority]
3. [Third priority]

Guidelines

  • Focus on patterns, not isolated instances
  • Some rules can be broken intentionally for effectβ€”note when this seems intentional
  • "Needs Work" means a pattern of violations, not a single instance
  • Technical or specialized writing may legitimately use jargon
  • Creative writing may intentionally break rules for voice

$ARGUMENTS

# Supported AI Coding Agents

This skill is compatible with the SKILL.md standard and works with all major AI coding agents:

Learn more about the SKILL.md standard and how to use these skills with your preferred AI coding agent.