Sometimes, you're writing nothing but a blistering hot love scene, or a character study, or a drabble. In those cases, your canon is all you'll want or need. But there are other times - Yuletide, a Big Bang, your own original novel-in-progress, that sprawling AU epic that's been taking up all your spare imagination for weeks - when you're going
(
Read more... )
Comments 17
Laurie
Reply
Reply
Reply
Reply
Reply
Thanks for the additional tips!
Reply
I agree that nothing compares to a human interpreter! Although I find Google Translate to be easier to use than Babelfish. Google Translate automatically detects what language you've pasted into the box, and can let you hear how it's pronounced. For languages that don't use the Roman alphabet, there's a transliteration option so that you can see a phonetic representation.
http://translate.google.com
For hard core research, or when you need technobabble for a character who's a scientist or "legalese" for a lawyer, Google Scholar lets you search academic whitepapers, monographs, patents, and law documents:
http://scholar.google.com/
Need to know more about how homing pigeons find their way home? Or how a subligacalum can give you a wedgie? Chances are that someone's researched it ( ... )
Reply
Reply
Reply
I've started deleting all my Google cookies from time to time, just to make it a little harder for them. And I use Google myself for work a great deal!
Reply
Reply
Reply
Leave a comment