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Name: Janel Yuka B.

Aoki Program: BS Legal Management


Date: 04/23/22

A writer's decision to generate their work is always for a reason. We rarely


consider it, yet there's always a driving force behind people's intentions and aspirations.
The author's purpose is the reason the author chose to write about something, and it is
the "why" behind the author's work. There are a variety of reasons why authors write.
The author's aim is the name given to these reasons. Authors can use a variety of
writing styles, themes, and dialects depending on the goal. The abbreviation PIE, which
stands for persuade, inform, and entertain, is a concise way to encapsulate the three
primary areas of an author's goal. Although there are various motivations to write, the
three major forms of the author's aim are to persuade, inform, and entertain. The
majority of other factors can be categorized into those three basic groups.
The first central objective of an author is to persuade. The purpose of the text
produced to persuade is to persuade the reader to agree with the author. This could
indicate that the author wants the reader to think or act in a certain way. Persuasive
writing is any text that promotes a specific viewpoint or calls for a specific action.
Certainly, the author expresses his perspective in various sorts of writing, but he usually
also includes evidence and examples. This material supports the author's point of view
and persuades the reader to agree with him. Speeches, advertising, commercials, and
newspaper editorials are all examples of persuasive writing.
The second central objective of an author is to inform. The author's purpose in
this format is to educate the reader about actual issues and present data about such
issues. These facts, however, are not utilized to support a specific opinion, unlike
writings created to persuade. The information is offered to instruct the reader.
Textbooks, recipes, newspapers, and encyclopedias are examples of texts written to
inform. The purpose of all of these forms is to convey information to the reader.
Last but not least, is to entertain.  When the author creates fascinating
characters, engaging plots, thrilling narratives, and sharp language, he or she is
attempting to keep things as entertaining as possible. The majority of stories, poems,
and plays are written to entertain the audience. Regardless, these works of fiction can
be persuasive or educational, but fusing values and ideas makes it simpler to change
the reader's opinion. However, the enjoyable goal must take precedence; otherwise,
readers will grow bored quickly, and the informational goal will be failed.

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