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RAW

RAW
57問 • 2年前
  • Dave Macalanda
  • 通報

    問題一覧

  • 1

    NARRATES, originated from the latin word “narrare” means related or told

    narration

  • 2

    tells what happened and establishes facts

    narrative paragraph

  • 3

    background of a story for it gives the place and time elements (it is the time and location in which a story takes place)

    settings

  • 4

    they appear in our imagination and we start to understand their actions. Characters can be protagonist, antagonist, static or flat, dynamic, round, antihero, and foil (it is the life-giving element of the story)

    characters

  • 5

    series of events in the story.

    plot

  • 6

    the characters and the setting are revealed.

    exposition

  • 7

    become complicated and the conflict in the story is exposed.

    rising action

  • 8

    highest point of interest and the turning point of the story.

    climax

  • 9

    events and complications begin to resolve themselves.

    falling action

  • 10

    final resolution of the plot in the story

    denouement

  • 11

    elevates the reader’s emotion until it reaches the solution. The problem that needs to be resolved. Revealing some truth about life is its main function.

    conflict

  • 12

    significant truth about life that a story attempt to communicate to its reader is called theme, most important and least explicit.

    theme

  • 13

    perspective of the writer in narrating the story

    POV

  • 14

    THE STORY IS TOLD BY THE PROTAGONIST OR ONE OF THE CHARACTERS USING PRONOUNS I, ME, WE.

    first POV

  • 15

    THE AUTHOR TELLS THE STORY IN SECOND POINT OF VIEW USING THE PRONOUNS YOU, YOURS, AND YOUR.

    second POV

  • 16

    THE NARRATOR IS NOT PART OF THE STORY BUT DESCRIBES THE EVENTS THAT HAPPEN. THE WRITER USES THE PRONOUNS HE, SHE, HIM, AND HER

    third POV

  • 17

    Gives information of what a person, an object, a place or a situation is like.

    description

  • 18

    has concrete and specific details, which are carefully chosen by a writer to paint a picture in the mind of the reader.

    descriptive paragraph

  • 19

    is a factual description of the topic at hand. This relies its information on physical aspects and appeals to those who crave for facts.

    objective description

  • 20

    This kind of description is based on opinion, emotion, and the author’s own perception of a subject.

    subjective description

  • 21

    should always contain strong, specific details. -conveys a dominant impression through specific details, sensory impressions, and figures of speech.

    descriptive writing

  • 22

    Focus of topic sentence that occur commonly at the beginning of a descriptive paragraph.

    central dominant impression

  • 23

    Supporting details to the central dominant impression are the senses of sight, smells, sounds, textures and feelings commonly known as

    sensory impressions

  • 24

    is a comparison of two things through the use of “like” or “as”

    simile

  • 25

    is a direct comparison of two things.

    metaphor

  • 26

    is the use of human characteristics to describe animals, things, or ideas.

    personification

  • 27

    Its purpose is to explain the meaning of a word, a concept or idea.

    definition

  • 28

    the definitions provided in dictionaries.

    formal definition

  • 29

    the term that needs defining

    species

  • 30

    the class to which the item belongs

    genus

  • 31

    the differentiation of that item from the other forms belonging to the class

    differentia

  • 32

    Unlike formal definition, informal is partial or incomplete definition. It does not define a term in its complete sense as it is based on the writer’s experience.

    informal definition

  • 33

    Gives the meaning of abstract word for one particular time and place.

    operational definition

  • 34

    words that mean the same as another word.

    synonym

  • 35

    exact meaning of the word.

    denotation

  • 36

    an idea or meaning suggested by or associated with a word or things.

    connotation

  • 37

    One or more paragraphs that attempt to explain a complex term.

    extended definition

  • 38

    groups items into categories to establish a clear distinction between related or similar ideas.

    classification

  • 39

    It introduces the main idea of the classification and often includes the criteria or basis for the classification

    topic sentence

  • 40

    It provides details and examples that support the classification.

    body sentence

  • 41

    It summarizes the main point of classification and may restate the topic sentence in different words. -it brings the paragraph to a logical closure.

    conclusion sentence

  • 42

    it discusses the elements that are similar or how things are similar.

    comparison

  • 43

    different or how they are different to each other.

    contrast

  • 44

    You present all of the facts and supporting details about one topic, and then you give all the facts and supporting details about the other topic.

    subject by subject

  • 45

    You discuss each point for both subjects before giving on the next point

    point by point arrangement

  • 46

    means giving examples. It is simply proving or supporting your point or thesis with examples.

    eximplification

  • 47

    use concrete examples to illustrate an idea.

    example that illustrate

  • 48

    give an explanation to illustrate a concept.

    examples that explain

  • 49

    use a short story to illustrate a point.

    examples that tell a story

  • 50

    something that produces an event or condition

    cause

  • 51

    discussion are often complicated and frequently lead to debates and arguments.

    cause and effect

  • 52

    is what results from an event or condition.

    effect

  • 53

    pattern organizes ideas into problems and proposed solutions. The other part then presents the major effects of the problem and the possible solutions to address it, as well as the steps in implementing the solution.

    problem solution

  • 54

    is a structured approach that arranges ideas to demonstrate how a collection of evidence culminates in a sound conclusion or argument.

    persuasive paragraph

  • 55

    involves influencing an audience to adopt a particular viewpoint, belief, or action using rhetorical techniques, emotional appeals, and logical arguments.

    speech

  • 56

    uses persuasive writing to influence readers' opinions, beliefs, or actions, using compelling arguments and persuasive language to emphasize the author's subjective viewpoint, aiming to make the audience believe in their perspective.

    editorial

  • 57

    involves influencing attitudes, beliefs, and behaviors to promote a product, service, or idea, using various techniques and strategies to persuade consumers

    commercial

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    問題一覧

  • 1

    NARRATES, originated from the latin word “narrare” means related or told

    narration

  • 2

    tells what happened and establishes facts

    narrative paragraph

  • 3

    background of a story for it gives the place and time elements (it is the time and location in which a story takes place)

    settings

  • 4

    they appear in our imagination and we start to understand their actions. Characters can be protagonist, antagonist, static or flat, dynamic, round, antihero, and foil (it is the life-giving element of the story)

    characters

  • 5

    series of events in the story.

    plot

  • 6

    the characters and the setting are revealed.

    exposition

  • 7

    become complicated and the conflict in the story is exposed.

    rising action

  • 8

    highest point of interest and the turning point of the story.

    climax

  • 9

    events and complications begin to resolve themselves.

    falling action

  • 10

    final resolution of the plot in the story

    denouement

  • 11

    elevates the reader’s emotion until it reaches the solution. The problem that needs to be resolved. Revealing some truth about life is its main function.

    conflict

  • 12

    significant truth about life that a story attempt to communicate to its reader is called theme, most important and least explicit.

    theme

  • 13

    perspective of the writer in narrating the story

    POV

  • 14

    THE STORY IS TOLD BY THE PROTAGONIST OR ONE OF THE CHARACTERS USING PRONOUNS I, ME, WE.

    first POV

  • 15

    THE AUTHOR TELLS THE STORY IN SECOND POINT OF VIEW USING THE PRONOUNS YOU, YOURS, AND YOUR.

    second POV

  • 16

    THE NARRATOR IS NOT PART OF THE STORY BUT DESCRIBES THE EVENTS THAT HAPPEN. THE WRITER USES THE PRONOUNS HE, SHE, HIM, AND HER

    third POV

  • 17

    Gives information of what a person, an object, a place or a situation is like.

    description

  • 18

    has concrete and specific details, which are carefully chosen by a writer to paint a picture in the mind of the reader.

    descriptive paragraph

  • 19

    is a factual description of the topic at hand. This relies its information on physical aspects and appeals to those who crave for facts.

    objective description

  • 20

    This kind of description is based on opinion, emotion, and the author’s own perception of a subject.

    subjective description

  • 21

    should always contain strong, specific details. -conveys a dominant impression through specific details, sensory impressions, and figures of speech.

    descriptive writing

  • 22

    Focus of topic sentence that occur commonly at the beginning of a descriptive paragraph.

    central dominant impression

  • 23

    Supporting details to the central dominant impression are the senses of sight, smells, sounds, textures and feelings commonly known as

    sensory impressions

  • 24

    is a comparison of two things through the use of “like” or “as”

    simile

  • 25

    is a direct comparison of two things.

    metaphor

  • 26

    is the use of human characteristics to describe animals, things, or ideas.

    personification

  • 27

    Its purpose is to explain the meaning of a word, a concept or idea.

    definition

  • 28

    the definitions provided in dictionaries.

    formal definition

  • 29

    the term that needs defining

    species

  • 30

    the class to which the item belongs

    genus

  • 31

    the differentiation of that item from the other forms belonging to the class

    differentia

  • 32

    Unlike formal definition, informal is partial or incomplete definition. It does not define a term in its complete sense as it is based on the writer’s experience.

    informal definition

  • 33

    Gives the meaning of abstract word for one particular time and place.

    operational definition

  • 34

    words that mean the same as another word.

    synonym

  • 35

    exact meaning of the word.

    denotation

  • 36

    an idea or meaning suggested by or associated with a word or things.

    connotation

  • 37

    One or more paragraphs that attempt to explain a complex term.

    extended definition

  • 38

    groups items into categories to establish a clear distinction between related or similar ideas.

    classification

  • 39

    It introduces the main idea of the classification and often includes the criteria or basis for the classification

    topic sentence

  • 40

    It provides details and examples that support the classification.

    body sentence

  • 41

    It summarizes the main point of classification and may restate the topic sentence in different words. -it brings the paragraph to a logical closure.

    conclusion sentence

  • 42

    it discusses the elements that are similar or how things are similar.

    comparison

  • 43

    different or how they are different to each other.

    contrast

  • 44

    You present all of the facts and supporting details about one topic, and then you give all the facts and supporting details about the other topic.

    subject by subject

  • 45

    You discuss each point for both subjects before giving on the next point

    point by point arrangement

  • 46

    means giving examples. It is simply proving or supporting your point or thesis with examples.

    eximplification

  • 47

    use concrete examples to illustrate an idea.

    example that illustrate

  • 48

    give an explanation to illustrate a concept.

    examples that explain

  • 49

    use a short story to illustrate a point.

    examples that tell a story

  • 50

    something that produces an event or condition

    cause

  • 51

    discussion are often complicated and frequently lead to debates and arguments.

    cause and effect

  • 52

    is what results from an event or condition.

    effect

  • 53

    pattern organizes ideas into problems and proposed solutions. The other part then presents the major effects of the problem and the possible solutions to address it, as well as the steps in implementing the solution.

    problem solution

  • 54

    is a structured approach that arranges ideas to demonstrate how a collection of evidence culminates in a sound conclusion or argument.

    persuasive paragraph

  • 55

    involves influencing an audience to adopt a particular viewpoint, belief, or action using rhetorical techniques, emotional appeals, and logical arguments.

    speech

  • 56

    uses persuasive writing to influence readers' opinions, beliefs, or actions, using compelling arguments and persuasive language to emphasize the author's subjective viewpoint, aiming to make the audience believe in their perspective.

    editorial

  • 57

    involves influencing attitudes, beliefs, and behaviors to promote a product, service, or idea, using various techniques and strategies to persuade consumers

    commercial