well the time, what year, the month, the day, etc.
the places that the book/story will be taking place at, describe it very well
you should have your characters (i know they arent part of the setting but they are important!!!) (DETAILS COUNT!!!! USE THEM!!!)
2006-10-11 15:41:27
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answer #1
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answered by Michelangelo 4
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As much information on the location or background, where the story is taking place, as you can work in without the details taking over the story. If it is a long story, you can put more details in than in a short one.
2006-10-11 21:56:45
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answer #2
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answered by harridan5 4
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If I were writing a description of a place, I would try to cover all of the senses. Describe the smell, looks, feel, sound, and taste of the air.
For example, the countryside on a winter's night might smell of pine trees, look like a blue blanket spread across the earth, taste the frost in the air, hear the rustling of the trees. And you could feel the wind cutting through the gaps in your clothes.
:)
2006-10-11 21:57:47
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answer #3
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answered by Oracle at Delphi 3
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The place and time, the atmosphere, what it looks like, sounds like.
2006-10-11 21:56:32
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answer #4
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answered by Norah 6
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A castle of course, every good story has at least one good castle, or was it one good looking guy, oh what the heck a good looking guy and a castle...you can't go wrong now. Ha Ha
2006-10-11 22:08:03
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answer #5
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answered by Cynthia 5
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time - date - place = the basics
2006-10-11 21:56:35
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answer #6
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answered by swaytz 2
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