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Sadler Final Review Terms: Essay Writing and Literary Analysis, Exams of History

A comprehensive review of essential terms and techniques for writing essays, focusing on narrative, personal narrative, argument, thesis, topic sentence, evidence, analysis, literary analysis, rhetorical analysis, audience, purpose, context, strategy, introduction, hook, conclusion, rhetorical question, description, satire, irony, humor, metaphor, symbol, emotional appeal, logical appeal, expert opinion, facts and stats, dialogue, quote, narrative hook, narrative paragraph, and analytical paragraph. It also introduces the tea (topic, evidence, analysis) method.

Typology: Exams

2023/2024

Available from 05/23/2024

carol-njeri
carol-njeri 🇺🇸

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Download Sadler Final Review Terms: Essay Writing and Literary Analysis and more Exams History in PDF only on Docsity! Sadler Final Review Terms Narrative - writing a story fiction or non-fiction personal narrative - a story the author tells about him or herself argument - a point or series of points. thesis - the main point of an academic paper. Stated in the beginning of the paper topic sentence - starts off the paragraph. main argument of the paragraph evidence - the proof, the facts. analysis - explains the evidence literary analysis - analyses fiction rhetorical analysis - analyses non-fiction audience - who you are speaking or writing to intended audience - who the paper is directly written for actual audience - anyone else who reads it purpose - the main overall reason for writing the paper context - the situation "big picture". the circumstances. strategy - specific ways to get your message across. exp; listing, personal narrative, irony, satire introduction - beginning of a paper. introduces the topic hook - the first part of the paper. used to draw the reader in conclusion - rap up an argument and bridge the gap to the next paragraph, or end the essay rhetorical question - a question that you already know the answer to, but it brings up a topic or issue description - use of imagery and sensory detail satire - a way to make something funny, but to also bring up a serious point. a witty response like SNL irony - the use of words to mean a completely different thing. sarcasm is a type of this humor - use of comedy to engage people in the text metaphor - direct comparison between two things
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