You are on page 1of 7

It requires more factual evidence for support, and presents challenges such as the

pressure of time. -Academic Writing


It doesn't use specialized vocabulary, such like scientific terms and other are used yet it
goes with slang or evocative phrases or even something which can be perceived well by
the audience. -Creative Writing
The information is merely based on facts. - Technical Writing
A writing that needs to be structured and executed adhering to a series of guidelines.
- Technical Writing
This writing is rigid, procedural, purposed purely to convey knowledge, data and
information. In fact, it is orderly, organized and follows a formula. - Technical Writing
Keep your writing complex. Try to describe something that is diffuse or abstract to make
it more appealing. –False
One of the techniques in writing sensory details is stating what the thing does. Tell
whether when and where do you find it or how do you know it’s there? –True
These are details that include sight, sound, touch, smell, and taste. Most writers employ
the five senses to engage a reader's interest and create a gripping memorable story.
-sensory details
"Elaine was amazed as she glimpse the deep blue of the ocean from afar. She opened
her car window and breathe in the salty beach air" –Smell and Sight
"I stick my toes in the warm and grainy sand" is an example of a sensory detail using
-touch
Anna hates the juicy tartness of oranges. She prefers eating  salty chips instead. The
italicized words are example of sensory details using __________. –taste
"As John stepped down in the old staircase, he heared the cracking of wood splitting
punctuated like an exclamation point. He rapidly shuts the dimming fire in his glass
lamp." –hearing and sight
"Her hair was like gravy, running brown off her head and clumping up on her
shoulders." Is an example of –simile
"The leaves danced in the wind." –personification
Her cheeks are big red apples from the cold. –metaphor
The sun kissed my cold face. –personification
"Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers.” – alliteration
Bang! The starter’s gun— thin raindrops sprint. -Dorthi Charles Knock at a Star
-Onomatopoeia
The wind stood up, and gave a shout; He whistled on his fingers, and Kicked the
withered leaves about, And thumped the branches with his hand, And said he’ll kill, and
kill, and kill; And so he will! And so he will! - James Stephens Knock at a Star
-Personification
"Ice-cold strawberries" is an example of _______________. -Gustatory Imagery
Which of the following is not a type of imagery? -Extrasensory imagery

On a flat road runs the well-trained runner, He is lean and sinewy with muscular legs, He
is thinly clothed, he leans forward as he runs, With lightly closed fists and arms partially
raised. - Walt Whitman Knock at a Star Identify two imageries used in the poem "The
Runner". – visual imagery hindi ako sure bobo.

“Two roads diverged in a yellow wood, And sorry I could not travel both”, these lines
came from Robert Frost’s ___________. - The Road not Taken

This sonnet of Elizabeth Browning expressed love for her spouse; specifically, to Robert
Browning. - Sonnet 43
He was a poet and labor organizer. He served as an intelligence officer of the Hukbong Bayan
Laban sa Hapon (Hukbalahap), an armed group against Japanese invasion during World War II.
- Amando Caruso

This is a popular song in almost every struggle, from the anti-U.S. protests of the 1920s and ‘30s,
to the resistance movement against the Japanese invasion in the ‘40s, the First Quarter Storm of
the ‘70s and the 1986 People Power.- Ang Bayag Ko

He is also known as Huseng Batute. He is popular for his traditional forms of poetry.
-  Jose Corazon de Jesus

It refers to the choice of words and style of expression that an author makes and uses in a work
of literature. It can have a great effect on the tone of a piece of literature, and how readers
perceive the characters. – Diction

The lines in The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle: “It seemed to me that a
careful examination of the room and the lawn might possibly reveal some traces of this
mysterious individual.” Sherlock Holmes is speaking to his close friend Dr. Watson. His diction is
_________.- Formal

It means the superfluity or using words unnecessarily or using words for a second time.
– Redundancy
There was an ovation when the minister rose up to speak. This sentence has/is
____________. -  Redundant
TRUE OR FALSE: “Let’s meet at 12 midnight.” - 12 midnight is an example of
redundancy.- True
A type of poetry that is composed of 3 lines, each a phrase. The first line typically has 5 syllables,
second line has 7 and the 3rd and last line repeats another 5.-  Haiku

A literature that evokes a concentrated imaginative awareness of experience or a specific


emotional response through language chosen and arranged for its meaning, sound, and
rhythm.- Poetry

It a form of nonfiction that talks about the story of a real person’s life. It is written by the person
whose the story is about. – Autobiography

A form of fiction that pertains to the actions of the gods and/or goddesses. Its
chacacters are super-natural beings with human emotions and qualoties. – Myths
It uses metric rules for amount of words, amount of paragraphs, amount of rhymes. This
also use grammatical rules, as types of rhymes. This type of specific form is called
________. - Conventional Form

A five-line witty poem with a distinctive rhythm. The first, second and fifth lines, the
longer lines, rhyme. The third and fourth shorter lines rhyme. (A-A-B-B-A). -  Limerick

A type of narrative poem in which a story often talks about folk or legendary tales. It
may take the form of a moral lesson or a song. -  Ballad

A French styled poem with nineteen lines, composed of three–line stanza, with five
tercets and a final quatrain. It uses refrain at the first and third lines of each stanza.
– Villanelle
A short rhyming poem with 14 lines. – Sonnet

This type of poetry does not follow any rules. Their creation is completely in the hands
of the author. Rhyming, syllable count, punctuation, number of lines, number of stanzas,
and line formation can be done however the author wants in order to convey the idea.
–free verse

The process and execution of creating a fully rounded, complex, and lifelike character
within your fictional writing with the purpose of making readers invested in them and
their life or journey is called character development.
False

What is imagery?- vivid sensory description

The phrase  "her shadow shaky behind a slight flame stemming from a candle she carried", is
an example of a ________________. -Visual Imagery
"Elaine was amazed as she glimpse  the deep blue of the ocean from afar. She opened
her car window and breathe in the salty beach air ." – Sight and Smell
Also known as “the art of making things up". It is an art of sorts - the art of making
things up.
Creative Writing

It is language used by poets, novelists and other writers to create images in the mind of
the reader.
Imagery

These are words or phrases that depart from straightforward literal language. It is often
used and crafted for emphasis, freshness, expression, or clarity.
Figure of Speech

It is the comparison of two unlike things or expressions, sometimes using the verb “to
be,” and not using like or as (as in a simile).
Metaphor

The chiming of the bells... The boom of the explosion.. is an example of _______.
Onomatopoeia

My teacher has eyes in the back of her head.


Idiom

There was a loud "THUMP" coming from upstairs. "THUMP","THUMP", "THUMP"!"


Onomatopoeia

The phone rang loudly. "RING, RING, RING!"


Onomatopoeia

Life is like a box of chocolate. You never know what you're going to get.
Simile

A form of fiction that pertains to the actions of the gods and/or goddesses. Its
characters are super-natural beings with human emotions and qualities.
Myths

Ice-cold strawberries is an example of _____________.


Gustatory Imagery
Ice crackled and pinged against the family room window is an example of _____________.
Auditory Imagery

Sweet aroma of baking corn bread - cinnamon-scented candle is an example of


____________.
Olfactory Imagery

You looked pretty ugly in that dress.


Oxymoron

The boy shouted, “Madam, I’m Adam!”


Palindrome

The Titanic was said to be unsinkable but sank on its first voyage.
Irony

The snowflakes danced.


Personification

This kind of writing is informative, instructional or persuasive.


Academic Writing

This kind of writing is Fictional and imaginative.


Creative writing

The sun was setting behind low, gray-blue storm clouds


Visual Imagery

Glass of sweet yet bitter lemonade.


Gustatory Imagery

It is the process and execution of creating a fully rounded, complex, and lifelike
character within your fictional writing with the purpose of making readers invested in
them and their life or journey.
Character Development

TRUE OR FALSE: Academic writing uses specialized vocabulary.


True
TRUE OR FALSE: Creative writing uses figurative, symbolic or even vague language.
True

TRUE OR FALSE: Creative writing is objective rather than subjective


False

TRUE OR FALSE: Creative writing uses generalized vocabulary rather than specialized
vocabulary.
True

TRUE OR FALSE: Creative writing is written to entertain and educate.


True

TRUE OR FALSE: The creative writing is for general audience or for masses but technical
writing is for specific audience.
True

TRUE OR FALSE: Humor, satire might be the useful essences in creative writing but such
thoughts or ideas have no link with the technical writing.
True

TRUE OR FALSE: In academic writing the most of the part is self-created, although the
idea might be inspired but in creative writing the facts are to be obliged and the note is
delivered from leading on what previously other greats have concluded.
False

You might also like