Can "slow" be a verb?

boron

Health writer
Super Member
Registered
Joined
May 6, 2009
Messages
995
Reaction score
46
Location
Europe
Website
www.healthhype.com
Metformin slows glucose absorption. Can I write it this way instead of Metformin slows down glucose absorption?

The exact term "slows glucose absorption" has more than 200,000 hits in Google, but only two (2) if I search with site:gov

"slow the passage of food" is much more common than "slow down the passage of food," though. "Slow the speed" is also common. It seems to me that "slow" alone can be used when things are obviously moving already. "Glucose absorption" does not sound so movable and my first example can be actually a bit awkward.
 
Last edited:

Fallen

Stood at the coalface
Kind Benefactor
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Jun 9, 2009
Messages
5,500
Reaction score
1,957
Website
www.jacklpyke.com
'Slow/s/ed' is fine as a verb:

http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/slow

'Slow down' is more an idiom:

http://idioms.thefreedictionary.com/slow+down

I'd rather see 'slow/s' than 'slow down' in academic writing (although others may differ).

On choices of the base form (slow) or the s form (slows), this link may be hepful as it shows why the base form of a verb (eg slow) is chosen over the s form (slows). It's all to do with number, poeple, mood etc:

http://grammar.about.com/od/ab/g/baseformterm.htm

But in general:

The man (3rd person single) slows his pace
The people (3rd person plural) slow their pace.
I run (1st person single)
She runs (3rd person single)
They run (3rd person plural)

Which is probably why:

Metformin (3rd person uncount) slows glucose abosorbtion

sounds better than:

Metformin slow glucose absorbtion

Metformin doesn't take an 's', otherwise "Metformins slow glucose" would sound better on the ear. As it doesn't and it represents a whole substance, the verb 'slows' sounds better.

This is purely how I see it working. Other AWs will let you know if I'm wrong. I'm not suggesting alternatives for 'slow' as it's not what you asked :)
 
Last edited:

boron

Health writer
Super Member
Registered
Joined
May 6, 2009
Messages
995
Reaction score
46
Location
Europe
Website
www.healthhype.com
Oh, slow/slows is not my problem at all, that's easy. But you say "slow" alone, not "slow down," could do.

What about "fasten" or "quicken" (to make faster), do they sound right?

You can fasten the delivery of the post by... or
You can quicken the delivery of the post by...
 
Last edited:

onesecondglance

pretending to be awake
Kind Benefactor
Super Member
Registered
Joined
May 2, 2012
Messages
5,359
Reaction score
1,661
Location
Berkshire, UK
Website
soundcloud.com
No. "Quicken" has a distinct meaning (see "quickening"), and "fasten" means to close (as in "fastening a coat").

Try "accelerate".
 

Bufty

Where have the last ten years gone?
Kind Benefactor
Super Member
Registered
Joined
May 9, 2005
Messages
16,768
Reaction score
4,663
Location
Scotland
There's no such word as 'fasten' in the sense of 'to make faster', as far as I know.

Try 'hasten' or 'speed'

It all depends upon context.
 

boron

Health writer
Super Member
Registered
Joined
May 6, 2009
Messages
995
Reaction score
46
Location
Europe
Website
www.healthhype.com
There's no such word as 'fasten' in the sense of 'to make faster', as far as I know.

Try 'hasten' or 'speed'

It all depends upon context.

Hasten - a new word to me. Please, only tell me it's a common one, so everyone understands it. As I see, it is used often in my contexts:

"hasten the absorption of oxygen"

"Speed" (not "speed up," right?) is even better.
 
Last edited:

Fallen

Stood at the coalface
Kind Benefactor
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Jun 9, 2009
Messages
5,500
Reaction score
1,957
Website
www.jacklpyke.com
Hasten -new word to me. Please, only tell me it's a common one, so everyone understands it. As I see, it is used often in my contexts:

"hasten the absorption of oxygen"

"Speed" (not "speed up," right?) is even better.

Hasten is fairly common. As for 'speed' and 'speed up' I'd opt for 'accelerate'.
 

boron

Health writer
Super Member
Registered
Joined
May 6, 2009
Messages
995
Reaction score
46
Location
Europe
Website
www.healthhype.com
Fallen, or anyone other, when you are looking for a health information for yourself in a nonacademic, but serious health article, do you want to read accelerate or speed growth, healing or whatever...I mean pure English vs. latine-derived words?

Mayoclinic.com, a very popular health website, is famous for their simplified language: Supplemental oxygen can speed the absorption process.

Is it something wrong with simpler words? Do they sound annoying or amateurish? I usually write for the "end users," so not doctors or researchers. I just want to hear this from someone who is English. Some (educated) online Indian and Chinese people were constantly warning me to write in a more understandable language.
 

onesecondglance

pretending to be awake
Kind Benefactor
Super Member
Registered
Joined
May 2, 2012
Messages
5,359
Reaction score
1,661
Location
Berkshire, UK
Website
soundcloud.com
Aim not for simplicity, but clarity.

Don't substitute the right word for a simpler one; but if the simple one is the right one, then use that instead of something complex.

Knowing which one is the "right" one is the bit that takes experience and talent.
 

King Neptune

Banned
Joined
Oct 24, 2012
Messages
4,253
Reaction score
372
Location
The Oceans
Fallen, or anyone other, when you are looking for a health information for yourself in a nonacademic, but serious health article, do you want to read accelerate or speed growth, healing or whatever...I mean pure English vs. latine-derived words?

I would find "accelerate" more professional in that use. Most scientific terms are derived from Greek of Latin roots.

Mayoclinic.com, a very popular health website, is famous for their simplified language: Supplemental oxygen can speed the absorption process.

Do you want your article to seem like something written for eight year old children?

Is it something wrong with simpler words? Do they sound annoying or amateurish? I usually write for the "end users," so not doctors or researchers. I just want to hear this from someone who is English. Some (educated) online Indian and Chinese people were constantly warning me to write in a more understandable language.

Sijmple words and structures are for simple people. If you are targetting the least educated people, then you should use the simplest words and sentences that you can. If your audience is composed of people with some education and intelligence, then you should use words and sentences that are more complicated. The "(educated) online Indian and Chinese people" that I have known had severely limited skill in English, even though they had advanced degrees.
 

fadeaccompli

here and there again
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Dec 26, 2009
Messages
899
Reaction score
227
Location
Austin, TX
Sijmple words and structures are for simple people. If you are targetting the least educated people, then you should use the simplest words and sentences that you can. If your audience is composed of people with some education and intelligence, then you should use words and sentences that are more complicated. The "(educated) online Indian and Chinese people" that I have known had severely limited skill in English, even though they had advanced degrees.

This is...well. An oversimplification.

Entirely putting aside the many problems with referring to "simple people" in such a context, let's look at the basic aspect of writing for different audiences. There are many simple words that are perfectly acceptable for people with "some education and intelligence." And in many cases, using a more complex word will make the writer look like someone with less education and intelligence... because it's the wrong word.

Use the right word for the situation and for the audience. A particularly literate audience may expand your choices; an audience educated in a particular field ought to give you many choices in field-specific terminology; and an audience reading for serious academic purpose may prefer complex, compact sentences to taking several simpler sentences to express the same concept.

But it would be foolish to choose more complex words and more complex sentences simply on the basis of believing that complexity is somehow superior, or a sign of a more "advanced" text in some way. Complexity should be used because it's necessary--for style, clarity, conciseness, or otherwise--and not for its own sake. (Note that if you're dealing with an audience that associates complexity with superiority, then in that case you are, in fact, using it for reasons of style.)
 

Bufty

Where have the last ten years gone?
Kind Benefactor
Super Member
Registered
Joined
May 9, 2005
Messages
16,768
Reaction score
4,663
Location
Scotland
Clarity is king, and simplicity is the key to clarity.

Simplicity in terms of saying exactly what you mean and meaning what you say.

Your main difficulty seems to be you don't always know how to say things simply and clearly - and that is always going to lead to misunderstanding. Especially in a medical atmosphere where it's essential for folk to understand what you mean.

We can, and are glad to help when we can, but it would be very advisable to consider having these articles vetted by someone who knew your intended audience well.

To be constantly warned to write in a more understandable language seems to me to be a warning sign that should not be ignored.
 

Fallen

Stood at the coalface
Kind Benefactor
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Jun 9, 2009
Messages
5,500
Reaction score
1,957
Website
www.jacklpyke.com
Fae and one make some really good points up there.

Just on a side note, I understand where you're coming from. When it comes to anything medical, I'm a simple person; I like things explained in ways that don't need a knife to cut through through the thickness of the words. But at the same time, English is my first language, I've been to university etc, and I've grown up knowing the difference between (and within) registers, so I get to know (purely by default sometimes) the subtle differences in word choice. I'd be happy with accelerate, hasten etc.

But not every reader is the same and you're right to consider your target audience as a whole and try and get a good balance between techincal and accesible. Like you say, you're not writing for doctors and medical researchers, so I wouldn't expect it to be at the more lexically dense end of the technical scale.

In the context you gave, 'speed' would be fine. Which is what Bufty was saying too, and he makes a good point on making sure you do know your target audience.
 
Last edited:

benbradley

It's a doggy dog world
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Dec 5, 2006
Messages
20,322
Reaction score
3,513
Location
Transcending Canines
Hasten - a new word to me. Please, only tell me it's a common one, so everyone understands it. As I see, it is used often in my contexts:

"hasten the absorption of oxygen"

"Speed" (not "speed up," right?) is even better.
I don't think hasten is REALLY common, but everyone should understand it. The noun form haste is surely more common, as in the saying "haste makes waste."
I would find "accelerate" more professional in that use. Most scientific terms are derived from Greek of Latin roots.



Do you want your article to seem like something written for eight year old children?



Sijmple words and structures are for simple people. If you are targetting the least educated people, then you should use the simplest words and sentences that you can. If your audience is composed of people with some education and intelligence, then you should use words and sentences that are more complicated. The "(educated) online Indian and Chinese people" that I have known had severely limited skill in English, even though they had advanced degrees.
I have mixed feelings here. If you're changing the speed of a physical object I have no problem with the word accelerate, but for other uses I might hesitate to use it (a four syllable word, or the noun form acceleration being five syllables) just to increase the fog index.
 

boron

Health writer
Super Member
Registered
Joined
May 6, 2009
Messages
995
Reaction score
46
Location
Europe
Website
www.healthhype.com
My last articles are about nutrition and my readers may be Pinoys, Scandinavians...occasional 12-year kids, but mostly adult Americans, who have digestive problems, are vegetarians etc., so they are usually familiar with related topics, but not necessary with all medical terms, so I write "stomach" instead of "gastric" diseases and so.

Now, I was thinking to start to "translate" some nonmedical Latin terms ("speed" instead of "accelerate"), because - why would someone want to read a complicated word if a simple one is available. I'm not a fan of the mayoclinic.com oversimplified style and I'm not about to invent a new word for a stethoscope, for example.
 

Rufus Coppertop

Banned
Flounced
Joined
May 24, 2009
Messages
3,935
Reaction score
948
Location
.
This

If your audience is composed of people with some education and intelligence, then you should use words and sentences that are more complicated.

seems to contradict this.

The "(educated) online Indian and Chinese people" that I have known had severely limited skill in English, even though they had advanced degrees
Words and sentences should only be as complicated as they actually need to be for the sake of edification.
 
Last edited:

blacbird

Super Member
Registered
Joined
Mar 21, 2005
Messages
36,987
Reaction score
6,158
Location
The right earlobe of North America
In your medical example: "slows glucose absorption", the verb "retards" would perhaps be a little more precise. Or maybe "suppresses". But there's nothing grammatically incorrect about the use of "slows".

caw
 

boron

Health writer
Super Member
Registered
Joined
May 6, 2009
Messages
995
Reaction score
46
Location
Europe
Website
www.healthhype.com
Suppresses is an exact but "complicated" word. Retards - yes. I was also considering "hampers," but I believe most people would understand "slows."
 

blacbird

Super Member
Registered
Joined
Mar 21, 2005
Messages
36,987
Reaction score
6,158
Location
The right earlobe of North America
Suppresses is an exact but "complicated" word.

Not. "Suppress" is a commonly used verb in everyday English, which any literate person would understand, without specific technical knowledge. And remember the audience for whom you are writing here. Not likely you're going to have anybody who would have to seek a dictionary to understand it.

We have pharmaceutical ads on TV with regularity that cite "suppression of the immune system" as a warning about side-effects of certain medicines.

In fact, the more I think about it, "suppresses" is exactly the word you're looking for in this particular example.

caw
 

boron

Health writer
Super Member
Registered
Joined
May 6, 2009
Messages
995
Reaction score
46
Location
Europe
Website
www.healthhype.com
A 15-year old boy from London understands "suppress" without a blink? One Indian teacher would yell at me that he understands nothing so he will not read further.
 

boron

Health writer
Super Member
Registered
Joined
May 6, 2009
Messages
995
Reaction score
46
Location
Europe
Website
www.healthhype.com
For whom is this writing intended?

caw

Mostly for English-speaking people, 15+, including those whose English is not their first language, and who have personal needs to find useful health information online. I don't care about style or rich vocabulary. For a random reader my articles are boring, really.
 

benbradley

It's a doggy dog world
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Dec 5, 2006
Messages
20,322
Reaction score
3,513
Location
Transcending Canines
...
We have pharmaceutical ads on TV with regularity that cite "suppression of the immune system" as a warning about side-effects of certain medicines.
I have the distinct impression those things are in the ads solely because the attorneys lawyers say they need to be in there, not because they're actually informing people of things.
 

blacbird

Super Member
Registered
Joined
Mar 21, 2005
Messages
36,987
Reaction score
6,158
Location
The right earlobe of North America
I have the distinct impression those things are in the ads solely because the attorneys lawyers say they need to be in there, not because they're actually informing people of things.

Probably, but the statement isn't a challenge to the average person to understand. "Suppress" is no more technical a verb than is "absorb".

caw