Expository is writing to explain and inform.
Expository writing as the objective of explaining or describing a given situation, idea, and or phenomena. Expository samples may include the elements of a title, introduction, thesis, body and conclusion.
it is different from expository writing because expository writing is not as formal
Typical sources of expository writing include textbooks, academic journals, research papers, essays, and informative articles. These sources are reliable and provide factual information on a wide range of topics for the purpose of explaining or informing readers about a particular subject.
I'm not sure, but I THINK it's something that explains something..... But I'd listen to me, ya know. I was a C.I.T. ya know! ACTUALLY : IT MEANS.. to clarifiy facts and data
Am doing an essay on "How to write an Expository Essay". Plus "What are the advantages and disadvantages in writing an expository essay?"
Expository writing is the art of explaining things that are hard to explain. So, if you wrote a paper about how to change your oil, that could be expository... or even just how to explain yourself. :) Cause and Effect papers are ones that usually focus on one cause and many effects, or several causes and one effect. Examples would be "why I decided to quit" or "How divorce impacts children."
You you you
Technical writing is usually about how to do something, or how something works. An instruction manual about how to make a light bulb is an example of technical writing. Expository writing "explains" something. A book about how the light bulb was invented is an example of expository writing.
Expository writings explain a topic to a reader in a systematic, logical way. As such topics can be anything you have knowledge about, such as explaining the way to use a computer, explaining three different interpretations of green marketing, etc.
No. Expository writing is generally directed at the public and is usually written in the third person. Occasionally, a piece of expository writing may be in the first person, for example, if the author wants to be 'chatty'.
It explains something like for instance 'how to do a task.' So all pieces of writing concerned with explaining the sequence of tasks to be undertaken in order to achieve something can be classed under expository writing. An obvious example would be 'how to make an omelet.' Another example of expository writing involves the explanation of how two things can be similar or different. The technique used here is a 'compare and contrast' one and involves stating either the similarities between two things or their differences of indeed both. When teaching this method of writing, a Venn diagram can be used to simplify learning.
no