Essay Writing
Descriptive Essay Prompts and Writing Tips
What is the purpose of a descriptive essay? If you have been given a descriptive essay assignment, your job is to write an essay that evokes clear and interesting images in the minds of your readers. The purpose of this posting is to provide descriptive essay tips, descriptive essay prompts, and other helpful advice on writing descriptive essays. Let’s get started!
Posted by Laura Callisen 17 Aug 2015
The Personal Narrative Essay Outline
There are two times when you will write personal narrative essays – for a college admissions essay requirement and as a course assignment in an English com class. Usually such essays will be written in response to some prompt and will entail your depiction of an experience or experiences that in some way have shaped what you now believe or value.
Posted by Andy Preisler 12 Aug 2015
Studying Famous Narrative Essays
When you are asked to write a personal narrative essay, whether it is as a part of your college admissions package, for scholarship competition, or for an assignment in an English composition class, your first understanding must be that this is not the simplistic essay that you may have written in middle or high school, speaking to your most memorable Christmas or your best vacation, or the scariest moment in your life.
Posted by Andy Preisler 10 Aug 2015
How To Write A Descriptive Essay About A Person
The is something about the personal essays - sometimes they are referred to as “character sketches.” But it is difficult to learn how to write a descriptive essay about a person, because we really do not read them often. We get “pictures” in our heads about characters in a piece of fiction over many pages of writing; and most non-fiction does not entail character sketches.
Posted by Laura Callisen 05 Aug 2015
Good Words for Definition Essay Assignments
How would you define loyalty? Would everyone else define loyalty as you do? Probably not. And this is the reason why writers and authors spend lots of time and many pages defining words such as these. They have many facets that must be identified and described. The word definition essay is often assigned in English courses, because it is an essay type that is usually in a writing curriculum.
Posted by Andy Preisler 03 Aug 2015
The Compare and Contrast Essay Prompts
Apples and oranges; dogs and cats; spring and fall. These were a few of the topics we were given for a compare and contrast essay as kids in primary school. We made two columns and listed their similarities and their differences, and then we wrote two paragraphs. My thoughts about this type of essay back then were that they were really easy to write. I no longer think that.
Posted by Laura Callisen 29 Jul 2015
How to Organize a Compare and Contrast Essay
The process of writing a compare and contrast that is well-written and effectively organized begins before you ever put pen to paper. In order to stay organized and to present your ideas effectively, you must first understand the features to be included in a compare and contrast essay. From a structural point of view, there isn’t much different about a compare and contrast essay and other varieties of essays.
Posted by Laura Callisen 26 Jun 2015
First Person Essay
Such type of an essay requires require selecting a life experience that will be interesting to readers and relevant to the course. Most students will agree that the more difficult parts of writing a first person essay are topic selection and use of descriptive language.
Posted by Laura Callisen 19 Jun 2015
The Autobiographical Narrative Essay
The autobiographical assignments never get old, since everytime the essay is different - there is no story alike. At the same time students stumble upon waht to write and/or how to present it. Just like always GrabMyEssay.com has developed a path way to follow on this type of assignment.
Posted by Laura Callisen 17 Jun 2015
Narrative Essay Vs Descriptive Essay
It is really easy to confuse the narrative and the descriptive essay, because they are so often intertwined. Think of the last novel or short story you read. There was a plot – that was the narrative. Then, there were passages that provided descriptions of people, places, things, or events that appealed to our senses and gave us good “pictures” in our minds.
Posted by Laura Callisen 29 May 2015