Welcome to my LinkedIn archive.
Categories: Dear 1L, Dear 2L, Legal Writing
By Year: 2026, 2025, 2024, 2023, 2022, 2021
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Search by word to find what I’ve written on the topic of your choosing!
Dear Legal Writer: Before you give that partner the draft you’ve been slaving over, make sure you fix these WORDY ways to say “when”:
📍 At this point in time
✅ “Currently” is better
*
📍 At the present time
✅ “Now” is better
How to use “this” & “that” in legal writing
Dear Legal Writer,
Back when I was drafting briefs all the time, I often faced a “this” vs. “that” dilemma:
—It came up most when I needed to describe an argument made by the other side before I could explain that the argument didn’t work.
Dear Legal Writer: Try to focus your “rule statements” around what one party must SHOW, as opposed to what condition must “exist” or “be shown.”
Here are 3 examples:
1️⃣
❌ Instead of:
"For a claim of negligence to be successful, it must be shown that a duty of care existed."
I’m thrilled to report:
A most unexpected eventuality:
My book’s just hit #1 in the “Law” category!
Now, I’m not so naive.
Nothing’s guaranteed,
The rank is just for one day.
I’m up against a big corporation today.
My book came out on Amazon, but I’m panicked that no one will focus on it,
—> which will cause Amazon to bury it in their search results.
I’m just me here.
—I have no publisher or big team,
—I fear that I’m running out of steam.
But I REALLY believe the book will help so many new law students.
♥️♥️ 𝐃𝐄𝐀𝐑 𝟏𝐋 — the BOOK — is live on Amazon!!! ♥️♥️
Kindle: https://lnkd.in/gecBqjGd
Paperback: https://lnkd.in/gJHmkWKs
Both versions will “publish” in 4 DAYS:
👉 Tues, June 25, 2024
Order TODAY to lock in promotion-week pricing!
4 Ways to Cut Words Without Cutting Substance
Monkey see. Monkey do?
Take 4 sentence-snippers to the zoo:
🔪 “there are”
“Four monkeys play at the zoo today.”
—is shorter than—
“There are four monkeys playing at the zoo today.”
-LinkedIn™ Etiquette for Law Students-
When I started, I didn’t even know how to “tag” someone. In fact, I didn’t even know it was called a “tag.”
I recall asking someone (who seemed non judgmental):
— “How do you make it so a person’s name lights up in blue bold so they get a notification that I mentioned them?”
I got laid off from my law firm in 2016.
I was 47, and I had no clients.
What firm wanted a 47 year-old, BigLaw burn-out with no book of business?
I felt old, useless, unemployable.
I tried to become a law professor, but that failed fast.
How to make a word plural: the apostrophe “s”
Dear Legal Writer,
I wanted to title a post, “do’s & don’ts.” But I had no clue how to make either word plural. So I enlisted my friend, Lindsey Lawton, to help.
Here’s what we found out:
It’s getting real, folks.
I’m spending the weekend in a final push on the book:
going through the last round of comments from the final proofreader.
A surreal feeling suddenly came over me on this early June morning, and I thought I’d share.
I bombed 1L legal writing. Got the lowest grade of my life.
It made me hate legal writing.
It made me never want to write.
Why am I telling you this?
Well, law school grades just came back.
Maybe you bombed writing, too?
The biggest complaint I hear from law-firm partners is that their associates don’t write well, and the partners are constantly having to rewrite their drafts.
The biggest complaint I hear from associates about legal writing is that the partners are constantly rewriting everything they write.
The result is that associates lack confidence in their legal writing.
“Myriad” vs. “a myriad of” vs. “plethora”
Dear Legal Writer,
Here’s everything you need to know:
🔸 To begin, “myriad” means “a countless number of specified things,” (Oxford English Dictionary), or “too many to count.”
It’s hard to feel comfortable working at a law firm when the attorneys say things you’ve never heard before.
Here are 7 sayings that I heard for the first time at a firm.
Learn these today, so you won’t hear them, feel clueless, and be left to wonder.
⬇️
🔸 “I forgot how ‘green’ they are.”