Deck 24: Discovering Causes and Effects

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Question
Which of the following skills will not help you create more interesting personal narratives?

A) finding significance or meaning
B) avoiding the use of direct dialogue
C) emphasizing conflict, suspense, and a climax
D) telling and showing
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Question
A person coping with the world around him or her (for example, driving in a blizzard) is an example of __________.

A) comprehension
B) collaboration
C) conflict
D) conclusion
Question
How a story affected other people at the time or how it affects them now is an example of a(n)
__________ point.

A) subjective
B) objective
C) narrative
D) persuasive
Question
When writing narratives, you should bring them to life by telling and ______________ action.

A) showing
B) stopping
C) sharing
D) shouting
Question
____________ uses quotation marks and reproduces what a person has said word for word.

A) Indirect dialogue
B) Direct dialogue
C) Revealed thought
D) Unrevealed thought
Question
Films, most TV programs, novels, and short stories are forms of narrative, or storytelling.
Question
People tell stories only to entertain others; narratives are not used to inform or persuade.
FALSE
Question
For a story to interest most people, it must not have conflict.
Question
Suspense is a state of uncertainty that makes readers wonder what will happen next.
Question
The high point of action in a story is called an anticlimax.
Question
Stories that stick with us usually have a point.
Question
Good writers mix telling and showing, choosing which moments to summarize and which to elaborate upon.
Question
Narratives do not benefit from space and time transitions.
Question
In a narrative, your purpose may be to inform, persuade, or entertain your reader.
Question
Finding the answer to who, what, when, where, why, how, and what was the result can be especially useful in writing a narrative.
Question
The setting of a story is irrelevant; only the action of the story is important.
Question
Arranging ideas in chronological (time) order is not helpful in writing a narrative paragraph.
Question
Describing in detail is especially critical near the climax because that is where you want the reader to slow down and pay attention.
Question
Specific words and sensory details are important for scene building.
Question
An organized narrative paragraph does not require a topic sentence or concluding sentence.
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Deck 24: Discovering Causes and Effects
1
Which of the following skills will not help you create more interesting personal narratives?

A) finding significance or meaning
B) avoiding the use of direct dialogue
C) emphasizing conflict, suspense, and a climax
D) telling and showing
avoiding the use of direct dialogue
2
A person coping with the world around him or her (for example, driving in a blizzard) is an example of __________.

A) comprehension
B) collaboration
C) conflict
D) conclusion
conflict
3
How a story affected other people at the time or how it affects them now is an example of a(n)
__________ point.

A) subjective
B) objective
C) narrative
D) persuasive
narrative
4
When writing narratives, you should bring them to life by telling and ______________ action.

A) showing
B) stopping
C) sharing
D) shouting
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5
____________ uses quotation marks and reproduces what a person has said word for word.

A) Indirect dialogue
B) Direct dialogue
C) Revealed thought
D) Unrevealed thought
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k this deck
6
Films, most TV programs, novels, and short stories are forms of narrative, or storytelling.
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7
People tell stories only to entertain others; narratives are not used to inform or persuade.
FALSE
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8
For a story to interest most people, it must not have conflict.
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9
Suspense is a state of uncertainty that makes readers wonder what will happen next.
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10
The high point of action in a story is called an anticlimax.
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11
Stories that stick with us usually have a point.
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12
Good writers mix telling and showing, choosing which moments to summarize and which to elaborate upon.
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13
Narratives do not benefit from space and time transitions.
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14
In a narrative, your purpose may be to inform, persuade, or entertain your reader.
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15
Finding the answer to who, what, when, where, why, how, and what was the result can be especially useful in writing a narrative.
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16
The setting of a story is irrelevant; only the action of the story is important.
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17
Arranging ideas in chronological (time) order is not helpful in writing a narrative paragraph.
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18
Describing in detail is especially critical near the climax because that is where you want the reader to slow down and pay attention.
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19
Specific words and sensory details are important for scene building.
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20
An organized narrative paragraph does not require a topic sentence or concluding sentence.
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