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Publishing your narrative (Editing process (Sentence Structure (In…
Publishing your narrative
Revising
Voice
Established and maintained a voice that communicates your theme appropriately. Remember, your narrative should be true to the teen you selected based on the facts you have learned about him or her.
Word choice
selected words that provide vivid details and interesting verbs in your writing. For example, instead of describing a dark and stormy night as your setting, you have a pitch black night sky lit by terrifying flashes of lightning.
Ideas
Incorporated all of your ideas in a way that makes sense so that your narrative progresses in a logical way from beginning to end. You’ve used temporal words to transition from one idea to the next throughout.
Sentence Fluency
Used a variety of sentences to keep your writing interesting for your reader.
Editing process
Sentence Structure
In addition to using a good vocabulary when you write, another important part of writing and reading involves being able to understand sentence structure..
Run - ons unit
A run-on sentence is a sentence that includes more than one idea without joining them together properly. It combines two or more independent clauses without using appropriate connections.
Comma splices
This is when the writer joins two thoughts with just a comma. This is not a correct way to fix a sentence. Comma splices are also errors in sentence structure.
Comma usage
Two complete thoughts joined with only a comma creates a problem: Always use a comma and one of the fanboys
Semicolons
The semicolon does what the comma cannot in these situations. Think of the semicolon as being a little bit stronger than the comma; it is able to join two related thoughts together in a sentence.