samples

The types of projects we have delivered include:

  • Provincial government program manuals
  • Database text descriptions cataloging agency materials and resources
  • Facilitator guides for parenting programs
  • Newsletter articles for government agencies
  • Edited text content for company websites
  • Research, writing, and editing for marketing/advertising plans
  • Evaluation reports for non-profit agencies and provincial government
  • Grant applications and final reports for federal and provincial funders
  • Letters and response documents

examples

The images below link to selected excerpts of writing and editing work we have completed for our clients. These samples are public domain or have had identifying information removed for confidentiality reasons. Click an image to open the associated file, or right-click the image and select "Download" or "Save As" to download the file to your computer. (All files are in Adobe .PDF format).


Writing Tips

What's the difference between "lay" and "lie"? "Lay" is s transitive verb meaning "to place something down." "Lie" is an intransitive verb meaning "to recline." Remember that transitive verbs are actions that are performed on something else, as in "He lays the book on the bed." Intransitive verbs are performed alone, as in "He lies on the bed."
Confusion tends to arise because the past tense of "lie" is "lay," as in "Yesterday he lay down on the bed." But as long as you keep the various conjugations of these two verbs in mind, and remember that one is intransitive and the other is transitive, it's actually fairly easy to tell the two verbs apart.

Contact

Infinitives
32 Beachfront Lane
Brooklyn, NS
Canada B0J 1H0

E-mail: info@infinitives.ca
Tel.: (902) 356-2670