Functional styles

The publicistic style

The colloquial style

The belletristic style

Style of scientific prose

The newspaper style

Style of official documents

Special vocabulaty

archaic constructions

Strictly regulated both lexically and syntactically

No emotive modality

Using capital letters and abbreviations

obsolescent mood forms (Subjunctive I and Suppositional)

Non-finite forms of the verbs, anticipatory, indefinite pronouns

always two member and non-elliptical, complicated by complexes of secondary complication? detachments and parenthetic insertions and passive constructions

Syntactically it doesn't differ from style of official documents

Developed system of headlines, titles and subtitles, footnotes, pictures, tables, schemes and formulae

Using "I" instead of "we"

Gripping attention headlines

Neutral common literary words

Using proper names, names of counties, etc. Abbreviations

Cliches

Diversity of structural types of sentences, developed system of clauses, the coating of bookishness

Classified and non-classified ads.

Direct address to the audience

Repetitions

direct

Synonymic

Framing

Polysyndeton

Parallelism

Emotive prose

Poetic style

Drama

Literary and colloquial language combination

Speech detached constrictions, gap-sentence link

Rhythm

Stylized

Presents variety of spoken language

It has redundancy of information caused by necessity to amplify the utterance

Monologue in never interrupted

character's utterances are much longer than in ordinary conversation

Consists of neutral, bookish, literary, exotic words and colloquialisms

Can be formal or informal

Dialect

Substandard English