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When it comes to developing a good, English prose style, there is no substitute for reading a lot of English prose, writing a lot of English prose, proofreading what you have written, and asking others to read what you have written. There are, however, some websites that can help you avoid really egregious errors. One of these is bartleby.com, which offers help in the following categories:
If you are not sure whether the phrase is "different from", "different to" or "different than", or if flaunting is different from flouting, you might check out this search engine, which consolidates several well known reference works on English usage. Type in the relevant word and select the entry that seems appropriate for your purposes.
Before you use a word with which you are not entirely comfortable, you might want too look it up in the Fourth Edition of the American Heritage Dictionary. If you have a tendency to repeat vocabulary too much--for example, if you employ the same word two or three times in one sentence--you might take a look at the search engine thesaurus on the same website, which may offer helpful synonyms. Be careful about this option, though. A thesaurus only offers words which canbe synonyms in the right context. When you consult a thesaurus, it's a good idea to restrict yourself to choosing vocabulary with which you already feel fairly comfortable. If you select a a word that you have never seen before, or even one that you have never seen used in context, it may have connotations that you neither intend nor want. Use the thesaurus to remind you of the existence of vocabulary that you already know.