Laura Geronimo
English 1 HP
20 July 2015
The Lively Art of Writing
Chapter One ?s:
1. An opinion is your own belief, and a fact is something that has been proven.
2. Facts are the basic outline of the essay which could easily be turned into opinions.
3. Opinions are not always equally good. Some opinions could be better if they start an argument because it means that not everyone agrees with it.
4. I think overall it would be a good essay topic because tend to disagree a lot with this topic.
5. Letter C. because you could state your own opinion.
Letter F. because you could talk about how the cost is too high.
Letter L because you could say why Moby Dick is the best in your opinion.
Letter P because a lot of people are going to argue saying that Most Students Could Read
Letter Q because you could actually state your opinion.
6. A typical term paper mostly uses facts unlike an essay where most of it is your own personal opinions
7. a. The title is already a fact.
b. Everyone would agree with this since it is their job to teach us.
c. This is clearly a fact, there really is nothing to argue about.
d. Of course everyone would want people to drive safely.
e. This paper would be filled with basic information instead of opinions.
Chapter Two ?s:
1. I think a thesis is a combination of your opinions into one clear statement. .
2. Take Inventory, Ask questions, look for relationships, yes-or-no questions, and quality.
3. It allows you to know if you will be able to defend
They listened to the lecture, a boring rant covering the statistics of world trade stocks.
1) The difference between an opinion and a fact is that an opinion can be used as the main topic of an essay. It is based on partial knowledge of a subject where the writer thinks what seems true. In a fact, however, the statements are based on absolute certainty and can be proven if needed to. Facts cannot be used as an essay topic since no sides exist, meaning no people to persuade.
B. How much does the text agree or clash with your view of the world, and what you consider right and wrong?
However, opinions reflect the values and beliefs of a person, so when someone shares an opinion, he or she attests that opinion to be fact in his or her mind. To illustrate, no one practices a religion diligently and faithfully without believing in what the religion says. A devout person accepts his or her religion as fact because his or her faith aligns with his or her ideas of what is fact. Therefore, the religious person has dismissed all other faiths and views his or her religion as the best fitting for him or herself. Conclusively, it is possible to objective with opinions and subjective with
“An opinion is a judgment based on facts”- Fowler, H. Ramsey. The Little, Brown Handbook.
Writing varies from a text message to a novel. Writers often have a difficult task in creating a piece of work that truly identifies the meaning of good writing. Every good writer usually starts with the basics such as genre, audience, rhetorical situation, and reflection of the piece. Throughout this semester, we have gone through all of these key terms in great detail with each new assignment that has come our way. In doing this, not only as students but also as writers, we have come to create our own theory of writing. Every writer has a different theory of writing though most are very similar. Now, at this point in the semester after doing countless journals, in-class exercises, and final assignments, I think I have figured out my own
Write a 5-paragraph essay using “How to Write Your Essay” instructions and evidence from Documents A-C.
Opinion: “Opinions are intensely personal, so it is understandable that people have strong feelings about theirs. (Ruggiero, 2010, p.34). Your opinion may not be the truth but for an individual it is a personal view and not any one else’s.
question. Students must consider factors and provide a rationale for which of these sets of ideas is of greater importance.
14. When writing an argumentative essay, which of the following should be avoided? (Points : 5)
4. The paper must logically develop the thesis in a way that leads to the conclusion, and that development must be supported by facts, fully
4. After that, I want you to tell me who defends their point better, and why.
Now, suppose I were to assign the following essay topic (DO NOT WRITE AN ESSAY):
"Everything we hear is an opinion, not a fact. Everything we see is a perspective, not the truth." -- Marcus Aurelius
Based off the words of George Orwell all opinion are equal, but some are more equal than others. There are echelons of types of options, some of the echelons can be tested and argued and some will be better than others. An opinion is not just saying an opinion, but the thought and perspective of it. If two people share the same opinion but one has no thought or perspective while the others does, is one better?