Skip to content
Thu, Jan 10 2008

Proofreading v. Copy Editing

question_mark.jpgA client recently asked me what the difference between a copy editor and a proofreader is. The short form is that the proofreader is, for the most part, looking only for typos. The copy editor, however, goes further and looks for style problems, technical punctuation and grammar problems and even awkward sentences.

You might want to read the article I wrote called: What’s the difference between proofreading and copy editing?

Write well and often,
Anne Wayman
Two newsletters:
Abundant Freelance Writing – a resource for freelance writers including 3x a week job postings.
Writing With Vision – for those who want to get a book written.

Around The Web
Share This Post:
  • Digg
  • email
  • Facebook
  • StumbleUpon
  • Tumblr
Work

Comments

  1. Trackback
    1579 days ago
    Freelance Writing Jobs » Blog Archive » Weekend Link Love for January 12th, 2007

    [...] Proofreading v. Copyediting at the Golden Pencil. [...]

  2. By Anne Wayman

    Lori, I’ve worked in newspaper offices where the proofreader couldn’t see the extras… extreme focus on tight deadlines…

  3. By Lori

    Yep, and for those of us who do both, it’s darn tough to turn off that editor mode when proofreading! I think it would be safe to say that proofreaders are also going to point out sentence structure errors and will alert clients to any really nasty wording.