ELECTRONIC WRITING FOLDER
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ESSAY WRITING HELP:
🎥CRASH COURSE ON ESSAY WRITING
Tell Them What You Are Going To Tell Them
🎥WRITING AN INTRODUCTION
or 🎥WRITE A HOOK
🎥WRITE A THESIS STATEMENT
Tell Them
🎥WRITE BODY PARAGRAPHS
🎥WRITE A PARAGRAPH TOPIC SENTENCE
🎥USING TRANSITIONS IN AN ESSAY
Tell Them What You Told Them
🎥WRITE A CONCLUSION
ACADEMIC LANGUAGE VS CASUAL/FORMAL LANGUAGE
TYPES OF SENTENCES:
• DECLARATIVE • • IMPERATIVE • • INTERROGATIVE • • EXCLAMATORY •
Types of Sentences Quiz Review
Types of Sentence Quiz - What do I need to be able to do?
• I can accurately define the four types of sentences.
• I can accurately identify the four types of sentences.
• I can accurately punctuate the four types of sentences.
• I can accurately write the four types of sentences.
"IS IT A SENTENCE?" PRACTICE:
SUBJECTS AND PREDICATES
SENTENCES: FRAGMENTS AND RUN-ONS
SIMPLE, COMPOUND, AND COMPLEX SENTENCE PRACTICE
HIEROGLYPHICS
BACKGROUND READING
HIEROGLYPHIC TYPEWRITER
introductions_for_narrative_notes.docx | |
File Size: | 131 kb |
File Type: | docx |
SENSORY DETAILS
Sensory words are descriptive—they describe how we experience the world: how we smell, see, hear, feel or taste something.
- Words related to sight indicate colors, shape, or appearance. For instance: gloomy, dazzling, bright, foggy, gigantic.
- Words related to touch describe textures. You can use them to describe feelings and abstract concepts, too: gritty, creepy, slimy, fluff, sticky.
- Words related to hearing describe sounds. For instance: crashing, thumping, piercing, tingling, squeaky. Often these words mimic sounds—that’s when they’re called onomatopoeic.
- Taste and smell are closely related. Most taste and smell words are easy substitutes for bland words like good, nice, or bad. For instance: zesty, tantalizing, sweet, stinky, stale.
- Motion is sensory, too. By using active words or describing movement, you help your readers experience your words. For instance: vibrating, soaring, mind-boggling, staggering, bumpy.
Click the link above. In Google Docs, make a copy. Title it <Last Name> Weekend Paragraph