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His/Her reason for writing. Examples: to explain/inform to entertain to persuade to enlighten |
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| A statement that can be proven true or false |
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| A short nonfiction work that addresses a specific subject. |
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| A statement that expresses a person's belief or attitude. |
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| seeks to convey an impression about a person, place, or object |
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| tells a true story; a story about a person's journey or events |
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| give info, discusses ideas, or explains a process |
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| tries to convince the readers to do something or accept the writer's point of view |
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| The story of a life from another person's perspective |
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| The writer's own story, describing notable events of his or her life |
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| reference to another literary, artistic, historical, or musical wor |
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| comparison of something unfamiliar with something that is better known |
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| briefly stating the main points and key details of a work in your own words |
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| Can be an author's opinion, claim, hypothesis, or conclusion. It makes a statement followed by supporting evidence |
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| The specialized or technical vocabulary of a particular group |
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| a word's dictionary definition |
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| A word's emotional feelings associated with i |
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| A literary device used to ridicule or make fun of human weaknesses |
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| A brief story told to make a point or to entertain |
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| A technique in which a writer intentionally says less than is complete or true |
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| A broad conclusion emphasizing common rather than specific details |
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| The central idea in a piece of writing |
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| Used to furnish evidence, describe a process, or create an impression; they back up a writer's opinions or describe a process |
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| The opening paragraphs of a news story and contains essential information. It usually tells who, what, where, when, why, and how |
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| A question asked for effect and to make a statement or point |
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| A mental leaning, inclination, prejudice, or bent |
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| A pattern of thought that proceeds from the known to the unknown, from the general to the specific, or form a premise to a logical conlusion |
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| A way of thinking that begins with specific details and goes to a general or logical conclusion |
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| he quality of being believable or trustworthy |
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| written about actual events, people, situations, etc.; the writer uses reality to make a point |
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| magazine or newspaper article |
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| the author gives a brief glimplse of a person, place, event, situation, or issue; published in a periodical (magazine or newspaper) |
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| the author uses research (statistics, facts, interviews, etc.) to make the public aware of an event or situation |
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| reflections, journals, diaries |
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| the author reflects on life events, usually to promote introspection, thought, meditation, etc. |
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| author delivers this address or message orally, usually with the intention that others will read it later |
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| a personal opinion of a specific subject |
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| a personal opinion of a specific subject |
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| a book the author writes about a particular time in his/her own life; it does not cover from birth to |
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| a one-on-one conversation in which questions are asked and answered |
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| based on author's opinion |
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| giving the facts; material is fact-based |
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| pointing out similarities |
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| gives information, explains or defines a topic |
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| detailed description of something that creates a mental image |
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| logical appeal; persuading through the use of reasoning |
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| emotional appeals; persuading by appealing to the audience's emotions |
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| ethical appeal; persuading by building credibility |
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| persuading through peer-pressure; "Everyone else is doing, so you should too." |
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| a statement testifying to the benefits one receives by using a product, behaving a certain way, etc. |
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| a statement testifying to the benefits one receives by using a product, behaving a certain way, etc. |
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| a first-hand account; it is reliable |
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| description by a person usually not at the event; not as reliable |
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| an idea which is suggested by the author but is not actually written out |
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