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5.3: Structuring a Description

  • Page ID
    223060
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    Description essays typically describe a person, a place, or an object, using sensory details. The structure of a descriptive essay is more flexible than in some of the other rhetorical modes. The introduction of a descriptive essay should set up the tone and focus of the essay. The thesis should convey the writer’s overall impression of the person, place, or object described in the body paragraphs. The organization of the essay may best follow spatial order, which means an arrangement of ideas according to physical characteristics or appearance. Depending on what the writer describes, the organization could move from top to bottom, left to right, near to far, warm to cold, frightening to inviting, and so on. For example, if the subject were someone’s kitchen in the process of being renovated, that person might start at one side of the room and move slowly across to the other side, describing appliance, cabinetry, and so on. Or, they might choose to start with older remnants of the kitchen and progress to the new installations. Or, maybe start with the floor and move up toward the ceiling. All of these are good approaches; as you brainstorm for your paper, though, what you will want to give some thought to is what you want your paper to emphasize for your reader, and that should lead you to your thesis statement.


    5.3: Structuring a Description is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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