Hemingway’s writing has been presented through his use of language. It has been pointed out that his writing shows a careful and controlled use of language trying to present the inarticulate side of life-as-experience. Being primarily concerned with the actualities of life, words merely serve Hemingway to transcribe life's experiences. Prompting the movement autward of emotion ho reduces the use of words, their use must be the most minimal and instinctual given the motion and fact which determine it. He uses His strange truncated style of writing in order to express thought processes of his characters as has been Indicated by using examples from his short stories: »Big Two-Hearted River«, »In Another country«, »Soldier's Home«, »The Killers«, and some other works by Hemingway. A parallel has been drawn with Melville and mostly Mark Twain, two nineteenth century writers. The conclusion has been reached that Hemingway's individuals seem to be more vulnerable than the protagonists of either Melville's or Twaine's works, therefore Hemingway's »silences« and »inarticulateness« have been more pronounced. Hemingway's grammar of inarticulateness thus serve to show his characters ways of accepting the way of life by exibiting the special code of discipline they are forced to observe as a compromise with life, and a way of survival: Hemingway's dispensation with the destructive rhetoric of language has been made full use of in his transcription of life's experiences.