E-Prime (short for English-Prime, sometimes denoted Eā²) is a version of the English language that excludes all forms of the verb to be. E-Prime does not allow the conjugations of to beābe, am, is, are, was, were, been, beingā the archaic forms of to be (e.g. art, wast, wert), or the contractions of to beā's, 'm, 're (e.g. I'm, he's, she's, they're).
Some scholars advocate using E-Prime as a device to clarify thinking and strengthen writing. For example, the sentence "the film was good" could translate into E-Prime as "I liked the film" or as "the film made me laugh". The E-Prime versions communicate the speaker's experience rather than judgment, making it harder for the writer or reader to confuse opinion with fact.
Read more about E-Prime: History, Different Functions of "to Be", Rationale, Discouraged Forms and Rationale For Typical Replacements, Influence of E-prime in Psychotherapy, Examples, Works Written in E-Prime, Criticisms