This type of sentence expresses one complete thought and is known as an independent clause.
Simple
This type of sentence has multiple independent clauses and are joined by a comma and a conjunction or a semicolon.
Compound
These must be used when starting every new paragraph (except the first paragraph) in an essay.
Transitions
These means putting someone else's words into your own words.
Paraphrasing
This is the number of paragraphs Mrs. Shunk wants you to have in an expository essay.
5
Hook
This type of sentence has only one independent clause and also has at least one dependent clause.
Complex
This is the number of paragraphs that Mrs. Shunk expects you to write with an argumentative prompt.
6
This is what you find in the sources to include in your essay writing.
Evidence
The first paragraph of an expository or argumentative essay is called a(n)...
introduction
This is the most exciting part of a narrative essay.
Climax
Similes and metaphors are types of this.
Figurative Language
The final paragraph of an expository or argumentative essays is called a(n)...
conclusion
This is a sentence that appears twice in your essay that lets the reader know what your essay is about.
Thesis Statement
This joins your hook and thesis statement in an introductory paragraph.
Bridge
What is the highest EE score you can get?
4
What is the highest Conventions score you can get?
2
What is the highest PFO score you can get?
4
This is the extra paragraph in an argumentative essay in which you recognize that there is another side to the argument and includes your rebuttal.
Counterclaim
What do the E's stand for in an EE score?
Evidence
Elaboration
What does the P stand for in a PFO score?
Purpose
What does the F stand for in a PFO score?
Focus
Mrs. Shunk taught us some of these to help us make our narrative writing more interesting. One example is foreshadowing.
Narrative Techniques
This part of your essay scores represents your spelling, capitalization, grammar, and punctuation.
Conventions
Name the three things that the writer should introduce at the beginning of a narrative essay.
Characters
Setting
Conflict