Things Not To Do In An Essay:
- Fail to address the question’s topic in your introduction
- Stray from the focus of the question (especially in the conclusion)
- Insert quotes without introducing them or relating them back to the topic
- Fail to provide references
- Use informal language, colloquialisms, or overuse rhetorical questions
Things to Do In An Essay:
- Proper essays require a thesis statement to provide a specific focus and suggest how the essay will be organized.
- A thesis statement is your interpretation of the subject, not the topic itself.
- A strong thesis is specific, precise, forceful, confident, and is able to be demonstrated.
- A strong thesis challenges readers with a point of view that can be debated and can be supported with evidence.
- A weak thesis is simply a declaration of your topic or contains an obvious fact that cannot be argued.
- Depending on your topic, it may or may not be appropriate to use first person point of view.
- Revise your thesis by ensuring all words are specific, all ideas are exact, and all verbs express action.
B. to present the resolution of the conflict
To slowly introduce the end of the story.
The falling action it telling the reader the resolution of the problem.
Hope this helps. c:
Sometimes they do and sometimes they don't.
When they do, we call that "onomatopeia".
But most often they don't. For example, "strawberry" is much too big a word
for that tiny red fruit. It should be called a "pleep".
And "sun" is much too small a word for that huge hot yellow thing in the sky.
That should be called a "fuuuarrmmhh".