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Revision 4 Word Choice

Revision 4 Word Choice. Standard Essay Structure English 11. Word Choice. The fourth part of the rubric is called “Word Choice.”. Word Choice. A piece of writing with good word choice has the following: Wording and phrasing that are memorable and lyrical

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Revision 4 Word Choice

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  1. Revision 4 Word Choice Standard Essay Structure English 11

  2. Word Choice The fourth part of the rubric is called “Word Choice.”

  3. Word Choice A piece of writing with good word choice has the following: • Wording and phrasing that are memorable and lyrical • Words that create pictures in the reader's mind • Strong verbs that lend the writing power • Specific nouns that paint a clear picture

  4. Word Choice Essays that have good word choice are essays that read as if the writer found exactly the right word that he or she needed for what he or she wanted to say. Good word choice doesn’t mean using big words or words that most people don’t know—it means using the exactly right word for the meaning.

  5. Word Choice To score high on word choice, you should be able to state the following about your paper: • The words and phrases are memorable and lyrical • The words create pictures in the reader's mind • I used strong verbs and specific nouns • I avoided fluff (words with no meaning)

  6. Word Choice The Key Will key words and phrases linger in the mind of the reader?

  7. Word Choice5 Points The words and phrases I’ve chosen seem exactly right to capture my thoughts and feelings. • Every word or phrase helps make my meaning clear. • Words are used correctly. I know-I checked. • A reader can tell I am writing to inform (or persuade or amuse) my reader-not to impress someone with overdone language. • I used some everyday language, but in a slightly new and appealing way.

  8. Word Choice 5 Points • Will a reader have some favorite words or phrases in this piece? I do. • I counted on good strong verbs (squash, wheedle, cajole, renounce) and precise nouns. A reader won’t find mountains of modifiers weighing down my writing. • I avoided the big word choice pitfalls: redundancy, vague, fluffy language (nice, special, great, exciting); jargon; and overblown, flowery language that annoy some readers.

  9. Word Choice 3 Points • My language communicates; it gets the job done. • A reader can understand my basic meaning. Some language is too general, however (We had a fun time). • Most words are used correctly. I didn’t often stretch hard, though. • Here and there I might have tried to impress my reader-even if it took a thesaurus to do it. • I may have forgotten to define some technical terms (if used).

  10. Word Choice 3 Points • Favorite words or phrases? Let’s see…maybe one or so… where was it? • Strong verbs? What’s wrong with is, are, was, were? And you can’t have too many marvelous modifiers-can you? • Did I get overly flowery in spots? (Her wild mane of hair cascaded tumultuously over her pearly shoulders.) Well, chalk it off to romantic novel syndrome.

  11. Word Choice1 Point What does this mean? I’m not sure myself. • Some of this wording is so vague I don’t know if it means anything: It was really fun and stuff, but then, you know, a lot of stuff changed in some ways • I think I misused too many words: She had a magnanimous hole emanating from the toe of her stocking. • A lot of my redundant phrases get a little redundant. That happens a lot. • Inflated or jargonistic language makes my paper ponderous and hard to read: I endeavor to imitate the goals that society has ratified. • I can picture my reader saying, “Oh, come off it!” OR maybe, “What on earth does he/she mean?”

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