Monday, June 22, 2020

Rewriting Services vs Proofreading Services


On Twitter alone, 6,000 Tweets are uploaded every second, which amounts to around 500 million each day. With this in mind, it is clear that billions of words are written every day for various purposes,which is one way to account for the incredible increase in demand for rewriting services and proofreading services in all areas of business, academia, and daily life. With all these words being written and all the professional writing services being ordered on a minutely, hourly, and daily basis, you might be wondering: “What exactly are proofreading services and rewriting services, and why are they so popular?”

Image: Why are proofreading and rewriting such bright ideas?



What is rewriting?

Rewriting services, which are commonly referred to by the name of“paraphrasing” services, aim to express the meaning of a piece of text (e.g., a phrase, a sentence, a paragraph, or even something as large as a book) using different words.

As such, to order a service of this kind, all a customer needs to do is find the text they would like paraphrased, send this to a talented and reliable paraphraser, and – before the agreed upon deadline – an entirely new document, with exactly the same meaning as the original, will be returned.

What is proofreading?

In proofreading services, the idea is to correct every grammar, spelling, and punctuation error in a document, including pesky and hard-to-spot mistakes. Some proofreaders may focus on issues such as style, tone, and even structure, but in most cases, these more comprehensive issues fall under the banner of “editing” services.

Like services that focus on rewriting a document or a piece of text, it is extremely easy to hire a proofreader to improve your written work. For example, in this day and age, the Internet has become extremely prominent, and by using an Internet-enabled device, you can upload your document on a service provider’s website and, within the agreed timeframe, receive back an improved version.

Proofreading or rewriting?

The question of which service to choose depends on your needs. Based on the service descriptions above, one service may jump out at you as the one that will address your current requirements.

Generally, you are likely to want proofreading services if plagiarism is not an issue in your document. Instead of resolving plagiarism concerns, the typical user of a proofreader’s services is someone who has brought their document to a finished state (i.e., they have produced the final draft). At this point, a proofreader’s efforts are vital in providing a professional polish to the manuscript before it is published, submitted, or used in any other way.

As for rewritingservices, there are two major use cases: firstly, you may have plagiarised another author’s work in your document, in which case the professional who rewrites your document will be able to ensure that this is not detected (i.e., by expressing the same meaning using different words, sentence constructions, and large-scale structures); or secondly, you may want to get a clearer understanding of something another author has written, in which case you might find it valuable to read the paraphraser’s expression of the same ideas and arguments using different, often more concise and clear, language.

Finally, it is worth noting that both of these services can be used together in the same document. For example, if certain parts of the document contain quotes from other authors (as in the image below), these can be paraphrased. By contrast, the original material can be checked for basic errors with proofreading.

Image: Proofreading and rewriting used in combination


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