Did you know that ... "Writing well is beautiful"?

Writing well is beautiful

The emergence of mobile devices and the proliferation of instant messaging networks such as WhatsApp or Telegram, and social networks such as Twitter, with its limitation of 140 characters, has led many users from the ingenuity to be able to express what they want, to write directly wrong, passing through the Arc de Triomphe the most basic and elementary rules of Spanish spelling.

What we express in blogs, social networks and others, is as important as the final degree project, it is available for anyone to see it, and it must be written correctly. For this, Wiko and La Vecina Rubia have teamed up and launched an application that, under the title Writing well is beautiful, aims to educate internet users and mobile devices to write well, well, raise awareness and teach, which some really need.

Writing well is for beautiful ... and for handsome, ugly and ugly, fat and skinny, blond and brown ...

Do you remember that ad for the popular soft drink? Well, we could apply that slogan here, because writing well is essential, if only not to look ridiculous. We all make mistakes, and the more you write, the more likely you are to make them. But there are mistakes, and mistakes.

Did you know ... "Writing well is beautiful"?

Writing well is beautiful is a new application «developed with glitter to write well on your mobile and have great hair» that has arisen from the union of WiKo, a technology manufacturer, and La Vecina Rubia, a sarcastic Twitter profile with almost two million followers and whose biggest concern in life is "having hair with a brain underneath."

The application is now available in the Play Store for Android devices, it is totally free and of an informative nature. The objective, they point out from Wiko, is «make users aware of the importance of the proper use of spelling, writing and grammar through smartphones«.

That is why the app offers "Rubitips" or advice with the main orthographic norms of the language of Cervantes, «Rubiconsults» sent by La Vecina Rubia to the RAE, launched by the blogger to the RAE itself, «Rubiurbanas Legends» with false myths about the uses of our language, and "Game of Blondes", a game in which you will be able to put the acquired knowledge to the test.

Remember, being pretty or handsome, going to the latest fashion, or having a hair that Hilario Pino would like to do is not at odds with writing correctly. By the way, would you be able to discover the spelling mistake that I have included in this post? Look, I've even put it in red?

Writing well is beautiful
Writing well is beautiful
  • Writing well is beautiful Screenshot
  • Writing well is beautiful Screenshot
  • Writing well is beautiful Screenshot
  • Writing well is beautiful Screenshot
  • Writing well is beautiful Screenshot
  • Writing well is beautiful Screenshot
  • Writing well is beautiful Screenshot

2 comments, leave yours

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  1.   Benjamin Doodle said

    Well, look, José: That you need to use not only the application, but directly from the Dictionary of the RAE, as well as the Pan-Hispanic of doubts and the occasional Spanish-English-Spanish.
    More than one mistake you have sent yourself in this sub-piece of semi-article that is very embarrassing.
    I may not be blonde or pretty or tweeter or pseudo-famous, but I do pride myself on still taking enough work to detail the magnas nonsense that, like yours, are shamelessly emboldened by the network.
    Argh! Gross!

    PS: It was about time that the platinum, mechi-painted ones took on the task of adding some substance to their bland figure (so the effect does not last or taste rich).

    Thanks for nothing, huh ?!

  2.   Jose Alfocea said

    Hello Benjamin Garabato. Thank you very much for your comment. Unlike you, I am even grateful for what I don't like, even when your words show an obvious lack of respect. It is clear that writing well, which you do, is not synonymous with good manners.
    By the way, this app, even if you don't like it, is about people writing correctly without making spelling or grammar mistakes, not about filling in a row of superfluous adjectives that neither clarify nor provide information.
    Thanks for killing your dull moments by criticizing my post. I love!
    PS: in Spanish, exclamation and question marks are placed both at the beginning and at the end of the sentence. And after the colon, it is written in lowercase, at least in the two cases where you have done it incorrectly. How much talk, but then ...
    I leave you the links so that this weekend you can spend a little time studying both rules and so, next time, do not fall into ridicule: http://www.rae.es/consultas/ortografia-de-los-signos-de-interrogacion-y-exclamacion y http://lema.rae.es/dpd/srv/search?id=2a3yRXFBiD6rvDOMtq
    A hug dear reader!