Writing@CSU

Writing Guides

Writing Summaries


Related Resources View Related Resources
Print-Friendly Page Print Page
Authors & Contributors

 

Defining the Précis or Nutshell Statement

Back Back to An End in Itself

Our English word precise comes from the same root as the French word précis, and the nutshell statement or précis is a precise and concise restatement of the original article’s main point. Typically only one or two sentences, the précis or nutshell doesn’t aim to capture the details, supporting arguments, or types of proof a longer summary does. Instead, the précis boils down an article to its essential main point.

The précis can be a complicated sentence (or two), especially if the main point (otherwise known as the thesis or claim) of the original piece is complex. And a précis can be extremely difficult to write even though it is short because the writer must take great care to capture the complexity of the original main idea. If you write a précis or nutshell statement to summarize an article, be sure to spend enough time revising to make it both clear and accurate.

Copyright © 1993-2009 Colorado State University and/or this site's authors, developers, and contributors. Some material displayed on this site is used with permission.