Yes, first you need to pick a topic. The next step is to research the topic. After this is you have to go through your research and begin to orginize it. You then write the rough draft, edit it, and finalize it. Sometimes you might want to do two or more rough drafts.
In literal terms, it can be considered a process, much as the process of breathing keeps you alive. Writing is not quite as autonomous as breathing, but it is just as natural and necessary.
Let me explain: The steps of breathing can be explained in technical terms. Something like a signal goes out from the brain indicating the need for more oxygen and the exhalation of CO2. The diaphragm expands and contracts in response, causing the lungs to expand and contract, taking in air and expelling waste gases. By the repetition of this process, we continue to live. Writing is similar to the extent that it is a natural drive or instinct. More accurately, it is an expansion of that drive or instinct.
Humans must communicate. Communication is interaction with other humans or personalities. The loss of this interaction causes the loss of sanity. Humans seek to interact with and connect to those around them from the minute of their births. Emotive emissions turn to verbalized noises, becomes word sounds, becomes words, then sentences. At about the same time children begin making word sounds and words, they also begin expressing themselves visually. Doodling and drawing become part of play activity. This becomes transformed into the graphic expression of writing.
We write what we speak. Writing has rules just as the spoken word does. We learn the rules of writing much as we learn the rules of speech, by mimicry, by modeling, and finally by experimentation--we strike out on our own and play with it.
So, writing is a process as far as it is similar to every other biological process of our bodies. Teaching it as a process however is a mistake and does a disservice to the learner. Think about it this way, would you have the ability to walk right now if your parents had explained it to you and expected you to just perform? How can any other natural "process" be any different?
in the process of
record.
Learning to say "writing" and not "writing process."
you mean phrase? ecrire des histoires
Xerographics is a word coined by the Xerox company to describe its dry photocopying process. Literally xero is Greek for dry and graphics is from the Greek for writing
you draw things.
in the process of
The suffix in the word "bibliography" is "-graphy," which means "process of writing or recording."
record.
writing process-is a kind of writting that has 5 processes. 1:drafting 2:editing 3:revising 4: 5:publishing
Writing or to write
The definition of the word "Programming" is "the action or process of writing computer programs." Hope this helps.
Stephen King reportedly uses Microsoft Word as his primary word processor for writing his novels. He has mentioned in interviews that he prefers its simplicity and ease of use for his writing process.
Learning to say "writing" and not "writing process."
The word is quill.
It's the slang way of writing the Spanish word Que.
you mean phrase? ecrire des histoires