Yes. If you don't get enough sleep, you'll be tired, and your writing will not be as good as it would be if you were alert and rested.
Not TrueA successful engineer needs to be able to write correctly and effectively. He need not be a creative writer or a clever essayist. Schools that teach engineering also offer (and usually require ) courses in scientific writing. Anybody who is smart enough to understand advanced math is smart enough to learn adequate writing skills. There is really not much difference between good mathematical writing and good engineering writing.
Start writing! The more you write, the better you'll be. Once you finish something, send it to a publisher or magazine - they'll tell you if you need more work or if your writing is good enough to sell.
That is an over simplification. You need to be able to write understandably in most any job that is not primarily manual labor. But for many jobs you don't have to be "good at writing," just able to do it understandably, using standard grammar and vocabulary. Of course, it helps if you are better than that. But if you are not good enough at writing, you can learn how to be better at it. There are courses just for that purpose.
We have enough evidence to prosecute Mr. Smith for money laundering.===================================================It is a good job that they do not prosecute you for not writing your own sentences.
You learn to write in three ways:Read - read lots of well-written material so you can see what good writing looks likeWrite - practice writing by doing itRevise - have someone else edit your writing to let you know what's not working, then fix that part and keep doing this until your writing is good enough
141 cc of what? And good enough for what?141 cc of what? And good enough for what?141 cc of what? And good enough for what?141 cc of what? And good enough for what?
A prompt doesn't have to look good -- it has to make the writer want to write something! Pick something that would be interesting enough for most people.
get smart is a good writing game :) :) :)!!
Writing is a strength if you are good at it. Anything you're good at is your strength.
It is part of a lawyer's job to be good at writing analytically.
It depends on which program you are applying to specifically; if it is mathematics PhD then perhaps the verbal and analytical writing scores are sufficient but not the quantitative score.