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WORD CHOICE

WORD CHOICE. SENSORY DETAILS A.K.A. IMAGERY. SENSORY DETAILS (Imagery) draws a reader in and involves him or her in your topic, bringing the audience into the experience. Writers use SENSORY DETAILS to make scenes life-like and multi-dimensional.

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WORD CHOICE

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  1. WORD CHOICE SENSORY DETAILS A.K.A. IMAGERY

  2. SENSORY DETAILS (Imagery) draws a reader in and involves him or her in your topic, bringing the audience into the experience. Writers use SENSORY DETAILS to make scenes life-like and multi-dimensional.

  3. Sensory detail brings imagery into your writing. In terms of vocabulary, pay special attention to the connotation of each word. Connotation is the emotional meaning (the feeling) of a word.

  4. Denotation is a word’s dictionary meaning. • Connotation is a word’s emotional meaning.

  5. Connotation • People use connotations, positive or negative, to shade their meaning. • We tend to choose words or phrases with a positive connotation to describe ourselves. • We tend to use neutral words to talk directly about someone. • We might use words with bad connotations to talk about someone who is not in the room.

  6. Examples of Connotation Overweight

  7. Example: I am selective. You are choosy. She is fussy. I am energetic. You are jumpy. He is unable to sit still. I am confident. You are cocky. He is conceited.

  8. SENTENCE FLUENCY EUPHONY AND CACOPHONY

  9. EUPHONY • Definition: a pleasant, harmonious quality of sound formed when words are combined to create smooth enunciation of letters and syllables. • An example may be seen in “The Lotos-Eaters” by Alfred, Lord Tennyson: “The mild-eyed melancholy Lotos-eaters came.”

  10. CACOPHONY • refers to the use of words that combine sharp, harsh, hissing, or unmelodious sounds. • Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s “Rime of the Ancient Mariner” illustrates cacophony: With throats unslaked, with black lips baked Agape they heard me call.

  11. One Paragraph Challenge (assignment) Use imagery to describe a Hershey’s Kiss. Write at least one sentence for each sense, but do not use any of the following terms:

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