Letters are examples of which rhetorical situation?
What is Genre?
The main points of your paper, which you go into detail.
What are Body Paragraphs?
Creating a structured piece of writing
What is Drafting?
Allows you to show people and scenes rather than just telling about them
What is Dialogue?
The proper format for an MLA heading.
What is your Name, Course Name, Professor Name, and Due Date?
Body, voice, and
various technologies, including print, telephone, handwriting, film, and radio are an example of which rhetorical situation?
What is Media/Design?
Contains the writer's claim.
What is a Thesis? (thesis statement)
Labels the time, day, and/or
month.
What are Time markers?
The width your margins must be on your essay.
What is 1" on all sides?
The attitude towards the writing, which is also known as your position.
What is Stance?
Explains why the topic is necessary or relevant. Can include a question, a fact, or a bold statement.
What is an Introduction?
Deals with technicalities such as grammar, spelling, and punctuation.
What is Editing?
The main events of a story. How the writer organizes these events.
What is Plot?
Fonts that are allowed in MLA format.
What is Times New Roman, Arial, and Calibri?
You are writing an email to your advisor about changing your major.
What is Audience?
Revisits the main points.
What is a Conclusion?
Usually have a conflict or problem that
needs to be addressed.
What is A Good Story?
Entries or sources are arranged on paper in MLA.
What is a Works Cited page?
Creates a dramatic effect or makes a point. A question that does not need an answer.
What is a Rhetorical Question?
Gives clues to the content and needs to be unique.
What is Title?
Improving and developing content
What is Revision?
This is where readers find out what happens
to the characters in the end.
What is Resolution?
MLA stands for what?
What is Modern Language Association?