Writing expresses emotions and knowledge through different styles and tones. Four main categories: narrative, descriptive, expository, and persuasive. Writers often combine multiple types for efficient message conveyance
'Which of the following' introduces lists of potential answers to questions. Commonly used in exams, surveys, and decision-making scenarios. Can have multiple correct answers but typically designed for one
Narrator comes from Latin, meaning person who relates facts or events. First-person narrator is active participant in story. Second-person narrator addresses protagonist using 'You'. Third-person narrator is not a character in story. Protagonist narrator has own opinions and thoughts
Narrative technique refers to storytelling methods used by story creators. Some scholars call it narrative mode or narrative device. Literary technique can refer to non-narrative writing strategies. Narrative elements exist inherently in all works
A paragraph consists of a topic sentence, supporting details, and conclusion. Paragraphs break up long text into manageable parts
"Me too" agrees with positive statements. "Me neither" agrees with negative statements. "So do I" agrees with positive statements about actions. "Neither do I" agrees with negative statements about actions not done. "I do too" emphasizes agreement with positive statements