answer:We can do that right here, in spades. (Means “a lot”, or “strongly”.) For example, the word ‘English’ is always capitalized. (In British English that word is ‘capitalised’, so there are spelling variations, too, depending on where your instructor learned English.) But ‘writing’ is always spelled with only one ‘t’. In writing, we would always include a space ’ ’ after each punctuation mark, too: , ! . All by itself that one change would make your writing much easier to read. And your English is already better than my Chinese will ever be, so no matter how much correction and criticism you get here, keep that in mind: You’re already one language ahead of most of us in the USA.