A . MUST , ? ! "" ' () - SHOULD A . , Capital Letter Full Stop Comma ? ! "" ' Question Mark Exclamation Mark Speech Marks Apostrophe () : ; … Brackets Dash Colon Semi Colon Ellipsis : Connectives ; … COULD A) Introduction B) Main Paragraphs C) Conclusion Use them to make a sentence longer, or to make your sentences link together well. Examples of connectives: And, but, so, while, although, which, because, therefore… Time connectives - useful for chronological order: Firstly, secondly, later, next, finally, meanwhile… Introduction You could include what, who, when and where in your introduction. All your texts need to have an introduction: Stories / Descriptions / Playscripts Explanation Texts Instructions Reports / Recounts Persuasive Texts Discussions / Balanced Arguments Biographies / Autobiographies Capital Letters Main Paragraphs Use a capital letter: for the start of a sentence; for a name such as Winston Churchill; for a day such as Monday; for a month such as September; for a place such as Paris, France or Europe, for a language such as Russian; for a people such as the Germans; for a festival such as Christmas or Passover and for God. You should always organise your main paragraphs into a sensible order: maybe chronological order (time order) or in order of topic (which thing you are writing about). You may need a new paragraph if there is a change of: Time / Place / Topic / Person Adjectives These are describing words (such as big or good), but make them much more interesting: There are many better words for big: Huge, immense, vast, massive, colossal, enormous… There are many better words for good: Wonderful, superb, excellent, magnificent, impressive… Verbs These are doing words (such as said or went), but make them much more interesting. There are many better words for said: Yelled, replied, whispered, shouted, muttered… There are many better words for went: Walked, skipped, travelled, rushed, sprinted… Full Stops Use full stops: at the end of a sentence, for titles such as Mr. Chamberlain and for abbreviations such as the U.S.A. or the U.K. Commas In lists: Great Britain allied with France, Belgium and Holland. After a sentence starter: Fortunately, children were safely evacuated. To separate extra information: Adolf Hitler, leader of Germany, invaded Poland. To separate speech: She answered confidently, "It was on 1st September." If you discuss a different time: Four hours later, the exhausted children finally arrived. If you discuss a different place: Meanwhile, in France, defences were rapidly prepared. If you discuss a different topic: Unlike the army, the air force was very well equipped. If speech changes to a different person: "I'm being evacuated to Wales," replied Terence. Conclusion Writing must have a conclusion (summary or ending). Adverbs They end in -ly. You should often add them to a verb for an improved effect. Examples of adverbs: Quickly, slowly, rapidly, carefully, politely… Descriptive language Similes - Her eyes were as green as emeralds. Similes - The jewels shone like the golden sun. Metaphors - This soldier was a lion on the battlefield. Alliteration - They watched and waited.
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