1 / 21

Describing and Predicting

Describing and Predicting. Wu-Lin Chen (wlchen@pu.edu.tw) Department of Computer Science and Information Management. Description. A description serves to introduce a writer’s view of something. A description may also tell the characteristics or distinctive features of an object.

glenys
Download Presentation

Describing and Predicting

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Describing andPredicting Wu-Lin Chen(wlchen@pu.edu.tw) Department of Computer Science and Information Management

  2. Description • A description serves to introduce a writer’s view of something. • A description may also tell the characteristics or distinctive features of an object. • The nature of something can be explained by describing it. • To describe something, you simply have to tell your audience about it. • You simply tell how your subject appears to the senses. • Many experienced writers find description one of the most challenging expressive modes.

  3. Using English To Describe • Physical description • It is a flaming ball of extremely hot gases. • Shape: ball • Physical composition: hot, flaming gases • The surface temperature is about 11,000° F, hot enough to turn every solid to vapor, but relatively cool compared to the intense heat at the center. • Surface temperature: 11,000 ° F, hot enough to turn every solid to vapor, cool compared to center • Located about 93 million miles from the earth … • Position or location: 93 million miles from earth • …the sun has a diameter that is approximately equal to 109 of our earths lined up like a row of beach balls, and that is about 330,000 times the mass of the earth. • Diameter: 109 x earth’s diameter • Mass: 330,000 x earth’s mass

  4. Using English To Describe • Functional description • The sun is the original source of nearly all our energy. • Importance: source of our energy • Chemical description • It is mostly made of hydrogen, although it also contains nearly every other kind of atom that exists on the earth. • Chemical composition: mostly hydrogen + nearly all other known atoms

  5. Sentence Patterns • The present simple tense is used most frequently when describing. • The most commonly used verbs are to be and to have.

  6. Sentence Patterns:Describing Characteristics The Nile River Mount Everest The Dead Sea The pipe 4,145 miles 8,848 meters 11 miles 3 centimeters long. high. wide. thick. is 4,145 miles. 11,000° F. 5,500 feet. 11.3. about 75 years. The Nile The sun The Grand Canyon Lead An elephant length surface temperature depth specific gravity life span has a of

  7. Sentence Patterns:Describing Characteristics length color texture orbits shape the Neil iodine sand planets earth 4,145 miles. purplish black. rough and granular. elliptical. spherical. The of is/are Pluto Glass Zinc and cadmium Blue stars Copper salts relatively somewhat rather extremely slightly small. brittle and transparent. reactive and silvery. hot. blue in aqueous solutions. is/are

  8. Writing Skills • To write a good description, you have to do more than string adjectives together. • Rules for descriptive writing: • Be specific • Focus on a particular aspect of what you are attempting to describe • Compare the object being described to something vivid (optional)

  9. Writing Skills: Be Specific • When writing description, avoid vague words like big, impressive, beautiful, overwhelming, bad, and awesome. • Instead, use more precise words. • Rachel is “beautiful.” • Give the details so that your audience can “see” • “Rachel’s radiant blonde hair backlit by the winter sun”

  10. Writing Skills: Be Specific • Be more specific by “translating” the adjectives into the five senses: • sight • hearing • smell • touch • taste

  11. Writing Skills: Be Specific • An “impressive sight” • a “drawn and weary, ashen-faced old man” • An “impressive sound” • “the mellow strings of the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra” • An “impressive smell” • “the cranberry vapors of my mother’s breakfast cake” • An “impressive texture” • “the smooth, cold marble of the altar.” • An “impressive taste” • “the salt-edged bite of the sea”

  12. Writing Skills: Focus On • For example: If you are describing a person, do not just randomly list his or her various characteristics. • Pick one characteristic (good humor, weariness, awkwardness) and use specific details to develop that characteristic.

  13. Writing Skills: Comparison • If comparisons go on for too long, focus can easily be lost. • Keep your comparisons short and pointed. • Example: The soldiers just stood there like bowling pins. • Example: The whaler’s rocklike captain refused to abandon the hunt. • Example: Checkerboard rice fields covered the valley.

  14. Predicting • The goal of all scientific investigation is to predict the future. • Assumptions are usually made before predicting. • No prediction of the future behavior of nature is 100 percent certain.

  15. Using English to Predict • A prediction is a claim that something will happen. • EX: At any giving time, the side of the earth facing the sun will have daylight, and the side turned away from the sun will have night. • A probable prediction • EX: If you light a match on an airplane, no wind will blow it out. • This prediction will come true if certain conditions are met.) condition prediction

  16. Using English to Predict • A hypothetical prediction • EX: If you should travel around the earth on these two dates, you would find the days and nights equal every place you went. • This prediction will also come true if certain conditions are met. But, since the conditions are unlikely to occur – you are unlikely to travel around the world on these days – the prediction is hypothetical. It may or may not come true.) condition prediction

  17. Using English to Predict • An impossible prediction • EX: If the earth were flat, the post could not cast a shadow at noon. • This condition is impossible – obviously the earth is not flat. Therefore, the prediction cannot be fulfilled.) condition prediction

  18. Sentence Pattern • Prediction • active: There {will be} an eclipse tomorrow. • passive: The eclipse {will be hidden} by the clouds. • Probable prediction • active: If it rains, we {will get wet.} • passive: If the eclipse is hidden, the photos {will be ruined.}

  19. Sentence Pattern • Hypothetical prediction • active: If I should studied, I would (could or might) pass. • passive: If the eclipse should be hidden, the photos would (could or might) be ruined. • Impossible prediction • active: If I had studied, I would (could or might) have passed. • passive: If it had been hidden, the photos would (could or might) have been ruined.

  20. Sentence Pattern • The future tense with will is used for predictions that are likely to occur. The modal would, could, or might are used for hypothetical or impossible predictions. • With if clauses, the subjunctive form were is used instead of was (for example, If I were rich…). • Any prediction that is based on a past condition cannot be fulfilled. • EX: If the war had ended a year earlier, many lives would have been saved. • Since the war did not end earlier, the prediction cannot come true. Nevertheless, the relationship expressed in the sentence is true.

  21. Writing Skills • Use modal auxiliaries properly to express your attitude towards the prediction. • Transition words for predicting • a few years from now • eventually • in the future • gradually • later • after a while • before long • one day

More Related