descriptive beach essay

Sort By:
Page 10 of 50 - About 500 essays
  • Decent Essays

    “My Vacation” (Rough Draft) As I lay back and reminiscence about a significant lonesome vacation to Myrtle Beach. I think about it as a peaceful place. It was in the middle of August where the temperature wasn’t too hot nor too cold, it was just right. I remember sitting back in the middle of the shore, listening to the waves crashing into the shore and the screeching of herring gulls. As I looked up at the beautiful blue sky that blended with the ocean, I visualized creative and fancy pictures

    • 800 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Beach kisses It was the middle of summer and we were at the beach, as people are in the summer. We all have our swimsuits on and where all cooling off, except for Kaileigh who refused to go in past her knees. Hana and Kylin were splashing each other mercilessly and I was just wading in the water, spectating this all out water war. After a few more attacks, I notice someone step onto the sand, Aiden, my long time crush. I stare at him for slightly too long and he looks at me with his alluring, ice

    • 805 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Better Essays

    Teaching From A Design Perspective Essay

    • 1714 Words
    • 7 Pages
    • 1 Works Cited

    Teaching From A Design Perspective Developing a philosophy of education is more than asserting a love of wisdom in the theory and practice of teaching. It may be heartening to feel, but it lacks backbone. For a philosophy to have weight and merit, it needs truth, logical strength, and soundness. (Hughes 19) My philosophy of education asserts the following premises that if we teach: learning as relational; creativity as skill; and knowledge as design; then, we create an instructional approach that

    • 1714 Words
    • 7 Pages
    • 1 Works Cited
    Better Essays
  • Decent Essays

    HsÜn Tzu’s essay explains to readers that “learning is fundamentally moral because it trains us to know the truth and to restrict the kind of behavior that is typical of ignorant people” (552). Tzu believes to be properly educated an individual must devote they’re life to proper learning. The type of learning Tzu valued in today’s terms, would be those who are college educated. Tzu believed for an individual to be moral, they must be properly educated, but this is not true. Morals are not born in

    • 982 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Rhetorical strategies are a great way for an author to get their tone and what they want to share to their reader. In Barbara Jordan’s Becoming Educated she uses rhetorical strategies to do just that. Jordan uses repetition and diction to increase her effectiveness of her message. She does so that the reader can also relate to what she is going through. By using repletion and diction she weaves these rhetorical devices throughout her experience to increase its effectiveness to convey her voice and

    • 729 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Poetry Analysis of Maya Angelou’s “Still I Rise” Maya Angelou’s poem “Still I Rise” was published in 1978 at one of the most productive and successful periods of Angelou’s career. “Still I Rise” tells about bouncing back and rising up past oppression and hate. The speaker in Angelou’s poem talks to a direct audience, asking them questions, announcing to them that no matter what they do, she will always rise back up. The poem is broken up into quatrains, although the last two stanzas use the repetition

    • 1228 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Imagery is a tool used by authors in order to make objects, ideas or actions appeal the reader’s physical senses.Peter Carey uses this tool often in his descriptions and while doing this, he also uses other tools like metaphor, simile, personification etc.In this essay, a few of examples of imagery in second part of “ Bliss” will be discussed. Below is the first example for imagery: “Look at him: sneaking up the stairs you might have thought he was impersonating a cat in a pantomime, or even without

    • 729 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Rest & Narvàez (1994) stated that moral development is a matter of learning the norms of one’s culture but that it is the individual who decides what is wrong or right. It is the individual, according to Rest & Narvàez (2994), that his\her interpretations originate from moral meaning from social events and makes moral judgments. With reference to the given dilemma: In my first set of interviews, both subjects C10 and A17 believed that Max should refuse to give his father the money. However, the

    • 323 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Decent Essays

    There is a difference between dying an honorable and noble death and simply dying. It is the gap between trying and giving up and it is the sense of the unbearable pleasure that comes along with success. In Norman Mailer’s “The Death of Benny Paret”, the author witnesses a first-hand account of the tragic death of the boxer, Paret. Through many rhetorical devices, Mailer is able to have an effect on his audience, allowing them to feel the same horror. Mailer uses diction to mold the events in a

    • 594 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Decent Essays

    The rhetorical devices found in the speech that Jane Addams wrote are hypophora, metaphor, conduplicatio, enumeratio, and personification. Each of these devices has a purpose in the passage, with the author combining all of the devices to strengthen her essay. The most frequent rhetorical device in the passage is Hypophora, which is when the author asks and answers a question. The author first mentioned hypophora at the beginning of the passage to ask what makes a great man. She later shifts toward

    • 762 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Decent Essays