Types of Writing Expository Narrative Persuasive 1.

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Transcript of Types of Writing Expository Narrative Persuasive 1.

Types of Writing

ExpositoryNarrativePersuasive

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Expository

Explain an event or an concept

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Narrative

Tells a story (fiction)

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Persuasive

Try to persuade or convince you to do something

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Genre

The type of story

Fiction

Non-fiction

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Non-fiction

True, based on facts

Earthquakes

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Biography

Story written about someone’s life

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Autobiography

Life story written by that same person

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Fiction

Not true, fake, not based in facts

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Science fiction

Takes place in the future

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Historical fiction

Fiction takes place in the past

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Realistic fiction

Type of fiction that could be real

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Legend

Story that keeps growing

The legend of Sleepy Hollow

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Myth

Story about gods

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Fable

Story that teaches a lesson or moralAnimals are usually the characters

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Fairy tale

Usually ends with “happily ever after”

Cinderella

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Fantasy

Story that uses a lot of imagination

Movie examples?

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Author

The person that writes a story

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Narrator

Someone who tells the story

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Illustrator

Draws the pictures or visuals for the story

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characters

People in the story

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Setting

Place and time of the story

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conflict

Problem in the story

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climax

The most exciting part of the story

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Theme

What the story is mainly about

Big idea

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Dialogue

Where characters speak to one another; may often be used to substitute for exposition.

Comics and plays

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1st person point of view

Uses I and my and we and ours

I WeMyOur

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3rd person point of view

Uses his and her and they

HeSheTheyHaroldEsperanza

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Voice

Add some personality to your writing

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Tone

Tells the mood of the story

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Visual/Illustration/Image

A picture from the story

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Summary

Retell the main parts of the story

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Chronological order/ Sequence

Telling the story in the correct order

12345

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Figurative language/Figure of speech

Use of language where the intended meaning differs from the actual literal meaning of the words themselves

Metaphor SimileHyperbole PersonificationOnomatopoeia Verbal IronyOxymoron

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Metaphor

Comparison that says one thing is something else

Papa is a mule and won’t understand

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Simile

Comparison using like or as

He is as blind as a bat

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Hyperbole

An exaggerationThat was the fanciest birthday party in the world!

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Personification

Human traits for something not human

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Onomatopoeia

Sound effect words

The tic-tac of the clock.

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Verbal irony

Where the meaning of a specific expression is, or is intended to be, the exact opposite of what the words literally mean. (Sarcasm is a tone of voice that often accompanies verbal irony, but they are not the same thing.)

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Oxymoron

A contradiction in terms.

Romeo describes love using several oxymorons, such as “cold fire,” “feather of lead” and “sick health,” to suggest its contradictory nature.

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Idiom

Give different meanings to words and phrases

Hey, Al. I was invited to be a judge for the Miss America Beauty Pageant!Oh, really? Come on, you're pulling my leg!No, honestly. Do you really think that I'm trying to fool you with a ridiculous story?Well, you've told me foolish stories before.I can assure you that this one is for real.

It’s raining cats

and dogs

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Foreshadowing

Where future events in a story, or perhaps the outcome, are suggested by the author before they happen

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Symbolism/Imagery

When words make pictures in your mind

White-purity

Red?

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Added to the beginning of the word

Re-readPre-viewUn-cover

Prefix

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Suffix

Added to the end of the word

Document-ationPublish-erSoft-enChild-ish

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Synonym

Same meaning

Huge=massiveStrange=bizarre

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Antonym

Opposites

Colorful ≠ ColorlessUnknown ≠ Famous

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Homonym

Sound the same spelled the same different meaning

Rose

The rose is beautiful

Jesus rose from the death on the third day

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Homophone

Has the same sound but different spelling and meaning

RedRead

BlueBlew

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Alliteration

Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers

Repeat the same sound at the beginning of the word.

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Assonance

The repetition of vowel sounds

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Analyze

Take apart; give reasons, piece by piece

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Compare

How are they alike and different?

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Contrast

What is different?

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Infer

Draw a conclusion

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Trace

Copy, follow the steps review.

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Formulate

Develop or create, come up with a plan

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Describe

Tell who, what, when, where and how.

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Explain

Tell what it means. Use who, what, when, where and how.

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Summarize

Tell it in your own words

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Evaluate

What do you think? Check it out!

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Support

Back it up!

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Predict

What will happen next

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Predict

Tells what happens next

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Poetry

RhymeBlank verseRhyme schemeStanzaMeterRepetition

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Rhyme

The similarity of ending sounds existing between two wordsBid me to weep, and I will weep,While I have eyes to see; And having none, yet I will keep A heart to weep for thee.

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Blank Verse

Non-rhyming poetry, usually written in iambic pentameter. (Shakespeare)

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Rhyme Scheme

The sequence in which the rhyme occurs. The first end sound is represented as letter a, the second as b…

Bid me to weep, and I will weep, aWhile I have eyes to see; b And having none, yet I will keep a A heart to weep for thee. b

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Stanza

A grouping of two or more lines of a poem in terms of length, metrical form, or rhyme scheme

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Meter

The recurrence of a pattern of stressed and understressed syllables.

Charging down the King’s path steady

/ ~ / ~ / ~ / ~ 8 A

On to meet our death charge ready

/ ~ / ~ / ~ / ~ 8 A

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Repetition

The repeating of words, phrases, lines or stanzas.

Love is a red, red rose.

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