English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

i want to write a bad experience of a day-at wedding, work, aking late on exam,, argument with friend, birthday. please its the question of my assignment

2007-11-04 01:48:36 · 7 answers · asked by Anonymous in Arts & Humanities Poetry

7 answers

Let me think on this...Okay...I've thunk. A great teacher pulled me aside one day and said, "Don't try to learn how to write a story. Learn how to tell a story. Go out into the world and stir things up. Then sit down and reflect on it."

Thanks Dr. Camacho.

2007-11-04 01:50:13 · answer #1 · answered by TD Euwaite? 6 · 2 0

a) 3/4 b) a million and 11/20 artwork for a: 5/9 + 7/36 have a liquid crystal demonstrate (lowest difficulty-loose denominator) of 36 so which you will substitute the denominator to 36 on the two. 20/36 + 7/36 = 27/36 27/36 can cut back because of the fact they are the two multiples of 9. The fraction can substitute into 3/4. artwork for b: 3/4 and four/5 have a liquid crystal demonstrate of 20. The fractions substitute into 15/20 + sixteen/20 while further jointly, you get 31/20 which will become a million and 11/20 in mixed form wish I helped! :D

2016-10-14 23:50:53 · answer #2 · answered by stinnette 4 · 0 0

If you don't know how to write a story, just be descriptive at first. Think of the facts, the bare structure of your story first. Remember that you need a beginning (always difficult: you can start by somebody speaking, or you can introduce a character with a description...) and an end (something must happen, there must be something that interests your reader at the end, maybe something that remains mysterious, or something surprising...).
Then, once you have all the elements, write your story.
Don't try to be literary, don't try to use such and such figure of speech. Be careful with your grammar and your spelling. Then, once you have the story in itself, you can improve it by (as an example) suppressing words which you think don't fit, using repetitions, or changing a few words. Reading it aloud is useful as well: does it sound right? Do you like the sonorities? Good luck.

2007-11-04 01:57:03 · answer #3 · answered by Lady Annabella-VInylist 7 · 2 0

just start writing whatever happened and then go back and correct the composition.

If my English professor saw that he would freak. so the correct way is this. Write an outline, then start writing you story. The first sentence has to be an attention grabber. Don't keep going over one thing over and over and over, it gets boring and they stop reading. so on and so forth.

If prefer my way but to each his own.

2007-11-04 01:57:00 · answer #4 · answered by starsdelite 3 · 1 0

first time through, just let the words flow. write what feels right, but if you can't get it perfect, no worries. it's not supposed to be.
second-umpteenth time through: edit. each time you reread/rewrite, focus on one aspect: characters, plot gaps, variety of grammar and vocab, first/last line etc. etc.
after many rewrites, it should be amazing

2007-11-04 01:15:47 · answer #5 · answered by kleptomanic sheep 5 · 1 0

think of an bad experience that happened to you before then write it down.... goodluck!

2007-11-04 01:52:23 · answer #6 · answered by don m 3 · 0 0

you can't *learn* how to write, you either know how to do it or you do not...

2007-11-04 01:00:40 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 1 2

fedest.com, questions and answers