Terrence T. answered 10/20/15
Tutor
New to Wyzant
I care about students and want them to care about studying
I have found that it's frequently helpful to re-read what I write, before I press "enter". In that way, I frequently catch errors.
For example, you wrote three sentences, but you appear to have forgotten to check the punctuation:
Your first sentence, "who can better my English" should have ended with a question mark.
Your second sentence, "I'm slow reader", should have ended with a period, and the third sentence should begin with a capitalized "P" in "people". Also, you forgot to put "can't before "comprehen" (which should be spelled "comprehend". Finally, the sentence should end in a period.
Your second sentence, "I'm slow reader", should have ended with a period, and the third sentence should begin with a capitalized "P" in "people". Also, you forgot to put "can't before "comprehen" (which should be spelled "comprehend". Finally, the sentence should end in a period.
Thus if you work on checking your writing, speed will follow on it's own. And so will your reading speed.
Mentally try to diagram your sentences, looking for a subject and an object in each.
Pay attention to punctuation. When you are reading your sentences, think how they would sound if you spoke them out loud. Those pauses you would make verbally are equivalent to periods comas, semicolons, etc. And normally a spoken question has slightly different inflection than a spoken declaratory sentence. Think about the difference as you proofread your work.