The very idea of a new Manner of Written Expression came as this writer’s personal twist and view of the irregular syllable. The Manner of Written Expression in which this particular text was crafted is called Brake in Thought. As the name of the Manner suggests itself, the Brake in Thought serves to give the reader pause from boredom, i.e. to rid the reader’s mind of what this writer would call deviant thoughts, in other words, it serves to give pause not to the thought process, but rather to give pause to the lack thereof. The Brake in Thought has a number of practical uses. It is the role of this technique to bring about lexemes, by way of the irregular syllable, not as the writer sees them in his mind, but as those words want to be themselves. On the other hand, and to speak more of the practical applications of the Brake in Thought we need only imagine with what ease will a, lets say University student, traverse the textbooks in a complex field of human endeavor, having already gone through the Brake in Thought and having already mastered the very reading of a prose text written using this particular Manner of Written Expression. The posibilities of what this writer calls the Manners of Written Expression are endless, and can indeed be thought of as a new kind of social game, so that future generations are not attacked with just, at times, senseless sentiments, dare we say raw emotions of the writer, but rather a proposition of how to better the human mind.