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PARAGRAPH 
WRITING 
(SECOND OF FIVE PARTS) 
Ma. Jezia P. Talavera 
BA Linguistics 
University of the Philippines Diliman
1. PARAGRAPH 
WRITING 
Fictional and Non-fictional
1. PARAGRAPH WRITING 
I was walking alone in the woods. Someone 
seemed to follow me because I hear footsteps 
from behind. It was dark, and the dry leaves 
make the sound of the night more eerie and 
spine-chilling. Someone was definitely following 
me because I hear another set of footsteps. Not 
human footsteps though. They were small, light 
animal footsteps that seemed to mirror my 
walking. When I looked back, I suddenly woke up 
from my dream. 
FICTIONAL PARAGRAPH
1. PARAGRAPH WRITING 
I was diagnosed with Stage 4 Cancer in the 
summer of 1987. I didn’t know how to feel; the 
doctor said it was only a matter of five months 
until I draw my last breath. I went out of the 
hospital and looked around. Nobody seemed to 
care that someone as famous and noble as me 
was going to die in five months. People were 
walking listlessly, busy with their own 
whereabouts. I wanted to disappear right in that 
moment. At the same time I wanted to shout to 
the world, “Why me?” 
NON-FICTIONAL PARAGRAPH
2. TYPES OF 
PARAGRAPH
2.1. NON-FICTIONAL DESCRIPTIVE 
“Let’s walk,” she says serenely, slipping her arm 
in mine and heading into Central Park. As she strolls 
along, folks check her out and occasionally point. She 
is tall, strong, and straight-backed, glowing with 
vegan health and moving confidently through the 
crowds in her all-black ensemble. In videos and 
photos, she looks like she has a prominent jaw, but in 
person it is much softer, as are her other features 
(Windex-blue eyes, glossy black hair). Her voice is 
gentle and melodious, and she looks you square in the 
eye when she speaks. 
—from Jancee Dunn’s “The Cole Truth,” 
Rolling Stone 786, May, 1998.
2.1. NON-FICTIONAL DESCRIPTIVE 
“Let’s walk,” she says serenely, slipping her arm 
in mine and heading into Central Park. As she strolls 
along, folks check her out and occasionally point. She 
is tall, strong, and straight-backed, glowing with 
vegan health and moving confidently through 
the crowds in her all-black ensemble. In videos 
and photos, she looks like she has a prominent jaw, 
but in person it is much softer, as are her other 
features (Windex-blue eyes, glossy black hair). 
Her voice is gentle and melodious, and she looks 
you square in the eye when she speaks. 
—from Jancee Dunn’s “The Cole Truth,” 
Rolling Stone 786, May, 1998.
2.2. FICTIONAL DESCRIPTIVE 
It was a tiny, grubby-looking pub. If Hagrid hadn’t 
pointed it out, Harry wouldn’t have noticed it was there. 
The people hurrying by didn’t glance at it. Their eyes slid 
from the big book shop on one side to the record shop on 
the other as if they couldn’t see the Leaky Cauldron at all. 
In fact, Harry had the most peculiar feeling that only he 
and Hagrid could see it. Before he could mention this, 
Hagrid had steered him inside. For a famous place, it was 
dark and shabby. A few old women were sitting in a corner, 
drinking tiny glasses of sherry. One of them was smoking a 
long pipe. A little man in a top hat was talking to the old 
bartender, who was quite bald and looked like a toothless 
walnut. The low buzz of chatter stopped when they walked 
in. 
—from Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone, by J. K. Rowling 
(Scholastic, 1999)
2.2. FICTIONAL DESCRIPTIVE 
It was a tiny, grubby-looking pub. If Hagrid hadn’t 
pointed it out, Harry wouldn’t have noticed it was there. 
The people hurrying by didn’t glance at it. Their eyes slid 
from the big book shop on one side to the record shop on 
the other as if they couldn’t see the Leaky Cauldron at all. 
In fact, Harry had the most peculiar feeling that only he 
and Hagrid could see it. Before he could mention this, 
Hagrid had steered him inside. For a famous place, it 
was dark and shabby. A few old women were sitting in a 
corner, drinking tiny glasses of sherry. One of them was 
smoking a long pipe. A little man in a top hat was talking 
to the old bartender, who was quite bald and looked like 
a toothless walnut. The low buzz of chatter stopped 
when they walked in. 
—from Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone, by J. K. Rowling 
(Scholastic, 1999)
ACTIVITY 
Write a five-sentence 
fictional and non-fictional 
descriptive 
paragraph in 10 
minutes.
2.3. NON-FICTIONAL NARRATIVE 
During the final years of his life, [Franz] Kafka’s 
health deteriorated rapidly. In 1923 he fell in love with 
Dora Dymant and settled in with her in Berlin; he asked 
Dora’s father for permission to marry her but was refused. 
In the winter of 1923-24 he moved into a series of clinics 
and sanitariums. He died, Dora at his side, on June 3, 
1924, at a sanitarium in Kierling, near Vienna. His 
surviving family, including his sisters, all perished several 
years later in Nazi concentration camps. 
—from “The Modern Period” of Literature of the Western 
World, Vol. II, 3rd edition. Eds. Brian Wilkie and James 
Hunt 
(Macmillan, 1992)
2.3. NON-FICTIONAL NARRATIVE 
During the final years of his life, [Franz] Kafka’s 
health deteriorated rapidly. In 1923 he fell in love with 
Dora Dymant and settled in with her in Berlin; he 
asked Dora’s father for permission to marry her but was 
refused. In the winter of 1923-24 he moved into a 
series of clinics and sanitariums. He died, Dora at his 
side, on June 3, 1924, at a sanitarium in Kierling, 
near Vienna. His surviving family, including his sisters, 
all perished several years later in Nazi concentration 
camps. 
—from “The Modern Period” of Literature of the Western 
World, Vol. II, 3rd edition. Eds. Brian Wilkie and James 
Hunt 
(Macmillan, 1992)
2.4. FICTIONAL NARRATIVE 
None of it came up until my early thirties, when I got 
involved with a woman. Her name was Jeanne. We had 
been classmates at Cornell, both pre-med, both of us seeing 
someone else. Years afterward I was working for a drug 
company in N— that was coming under fire for 
manufacturing an anti-depressant that had bad side 
effects. We were trying to gather some support for the drug 
from the medical community, and I met Jeanne again at a 
conference. She had become a shrink. Excuse me, a 
psychiatrist. And yes, she had done a lot of research on 
posttraumatic psychosis and even had a healthy share of 
Holocaust survivors and incest victims and Vietnam 
veterans among her clients. 
—from Pink Slip, by Rita Ciresi (Delta Publishing, 1999)
2.4. FICTIONAL NARRATIVE 
None of it came up until my early thirties, when I got 
involved with a woman. Her name was Jeanne. We had 
been classmates at Cornell, both pre-med, both of us 
seeing someone else. Years afterward I was working for 
a drug company in N— that was coming under fire for 
manufacturing an anti-depressant that had bad side 
effects. We were trying to gather some support for the 
drug from the medical community, and I met Jeanne 
again at a conference. She had become a shrink. Excuse 
me, a psychiatrist. And yes, she had done a lot of research 
on posttraumatic psychosis and even had a healthy share 
of Holocaust survivors and incest victims and Vietnam 
veterans among her clients. 
—from Pink Slip, by Rita Ciresi (Delta Publishing, 1999)
ACTIVITY 
Write a five-sentence 
fictional and non-fictional 
narrative 
paragraph in 10 
minutes.
2.5. NON-FICTION EXPOSITORY 
The use of wedding rings has evolved as the latest of all 
the bridal traditions. From the earliest times, kings used 
initial rings to sign documents because they were unable to 
write. Since the initial, or signet, ring had the potency of the 
king’s signature, anyone possessing a facsimile was put to 
death immediately. Later, during Greek times, when 
Alexander the Great died, his vast kingdom was, according to 
his instructions, divided among his generals. They also got 
copies of his signet ring. They used these themselves and 
even allowed trusted advisors to use them when they served 
as the generals’ proxies. Eventually, rulers even allowed 
their courtiers to wear copies of their royal signets. Finally, 
the custom spread among the common people, and nearly 
everybody who couldn’t write signed official documents with 
a signet ring. Rings thus became a sign of contractual 
agreement, which meaning was eventually applied to 
wedding rings.
2.5. NON-FICTION EXPOSITORY 
The use of wedding rings has evolved as the 
latest of all the bridal traditions. From the earliest times, 
kings used initial rings to sign documents because they were 
unable to write. Since the initial, or signet, ring had the 
potency of the king’s signature, anyone possessing a 
facsimile was put to death immediately. Later, during 
Greek times, when Alexander the Great died, his vast 
kingdom was, according to his instructions, divided 
among his generals. They also got copies of his signet ring. 
They used these themselves and even allowed trusted 
advisors to use them when they served as the generals’ 
proxies. Eventually, rulers even allowed their courtiers to 
wear copies of their royal signets. Finally, the custom 
spread among the common people, and nearly 
everybody who couldn’t write signed official 
documents with a signet ring. Rings thus became a sign 
of contractual agreement, which meaning was eventually 
applied to wedding rings.
2.6. FICTIONAL EXPOSITORY 
Many of the Jews of Iberian origin had long ago been 
robbed of the knowledge of their rituals, forced, during the 
time of the Inquisition, to convert to the Catholic faith. 
These so-called New Christians were sometimes sincere in 
their conversions, while others had continued to practice 
their religion in secret, but after a generation or two they 
often forgot why they secretly observed these now-obscure 
rituals. When these secret Jews fled Iberia for the Dutch 
states, as they began to do in the sixteenth century, many 
sought to regain Jewish knowledge. My father’s 
grandfather had been such a man, and he schooled himself 
in the Jewish traditions—even studying with the great 
Rabbi Manasseh ben Israel—and he raised his children to 
honor the Jewish traditions. 
—from A Conspiracy of Paper, by David Liss (Random House, 
2000)
2.6. FICTIONAL EXPOSITORY 
Many of the Jews of Iberian origin had long 
ago been robbed of the knowledge of their rituals, 
forced, during the time of the Inquisition, to convert 
to the Catholic faith. These so-called New Christians 
were sometimes sincere in their conversions, while others 
had continued to practice their religion in secret, but after 
a generation or two they often forgot why they secretly 
observed these now-obscure rituals. When these secret 
Jews fled Iberia for the Dutch states, as they began to do in 
the sixteenth century, many sought to regain Jewish 
knowledge. My father’s grandfather had been such a 
man, and he schooled himself in the Jewish 
traditions—even studying with the great Rabbi Manasseh 
ben Israel—and he raised his children to honor the Jewish 
traditions. 
—from A Conspiracy of Paper, by David Liss (Random House, 
2000)
ACTIVITY 
Write a five-sentence 
fictional and non-fictional 
expository 
paragraph in 10 
minutes.
2.7. NON-FICTIONAL 
ARGUMENTATIVE 
Nothing gives the English more pleasure, in a quiet 
but determined sort of way, than to do things oddly. They 
put milk in their tea, drive on the wrong side of the road, 
pronounce Cholmondeley as “Chumley” and Belvoir as 
“Beaver,” celebrate the Queen’s birthday in June even 
though she was born in April, and dress their palace 
guards in bearskin helmets that make them look as if, for 
some private and unfathomable reason, they are wearing 
fur-lined wastebaskets on their heads. 
—from Notes from a Small Island, by Bill Bryson (Doubleday, 
1995)
2.7. NON-FICTIONAL 
ARGUMENTATIVE 
Nothing gives the English more pleasure, in a 
quiet but determined sort of way, than to do things 
oddly. They put milk in their tea, drive on the wrong side 
of the road, pronounce Cholmondeley as “Chumley” and 
Belvoir as “Beaver,” celebrate the Queen’s birthday in June 
even though she was born in April, and dress their palace 
guards in bearskin helmets that make them look as if, for 
some private and unfathomable reason, they are 
wearing fur-lined wastebaskets on their heads. 
—from Notes from a Small Island, by Bill Bryson (Doubleday, 
1995)
2.8. FICTIONAL ARGUMENTATIVE 
Some people say that my wife’s sister is a witch. My 
father, for one. My brother, for another. And while I will 
not dispute their use of the term when they are merely 
alluding to her somewhat contrary nature, I do take issue 
with them when they use the word to malign what she 
believes is her calling. After all, it is a calling that to a 
lesser extent my wife hears as well. No, my sister-in-law is 
no witch, at least not literally. She, along with my wife and 
my mother-in-law, is simply a dowser. She is capable of 
finding underground water with a stick. She is capable of 
divining underground water with a stick. And unlike my 
wife and my mother-in-law, she is an active dowser. She 
does not merely have the power, she uses it.
2.8. FICTIONAL ARGUMENTATIVE 
Some people say that my wife’s sister is a witch. 
My father, for one. My brother, for another. And while I 
will not dispute their use of the term when they are merely 
alluding to her somewhat contrary nature, I do take issue 
with them when they use the word to malign what she 
believes is her calling. After all, it is a calling that to a 
lesser extent my wife hears as well. No, my sister-in-law 
is no witch, at least not literally. She, along with my 
wife and my mother-in-law, is simply a dowser. She is 
capable of finding underground water with a stick. She is 
capable of divining underground water with a stick. And 
unlike my wife and my mother-in-law, she is an active 
dowser. She does not merely have the power, she uses it.
ACTIVITY 
Write a five-sentence 
fictional and non-fictional 
argumentative 
paragraph in 10 
minutes.
REFERENCES 
 Types of Paragraphs. Writers’ Digest University. 
Retrieved August 18, 2014 from 
http://www.writersonlineworkshops.com/resource 
s/types-of-paragraphs/

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2 paragraph writing

  • 1. PARAGRAPH WRITING (SECOND OF FIVE PARTS) Ma. Jezia P. Talavera BA Linguistics University of the Philippines Diliman
  • 2.
  • 3. 1. PARAGRAPH WRITING Fictional and Non-fictional
  • 4. 1. PARAGRAPH WRITING I was walking alone in the woods. Someone seemed to follow me because I hear footsteps from behind. It was dark, and the dry leaves make the sound of the night more eerie and spine-chilling. Someone was definitely following me because I hear another set of footsteps. Not human footsteps though. They were small, light animal footsteps that seemed to mirror my walking. When I looked back, I suddenly woke up from my dream. FICTIONAL PARAGRAPH
  • 5. 1. PARAGRAPH WRITING I was diagnosed with Stage 4 Cancer in the summer of 1987. I didn’t know how to feel; the doctor said it was only a matter of five months until I draw my last breath. I went out of the hospital and looked around. Nobody seemed to care that someone as famous and noble as me was going to die in five months. People were walking listlessly, busy with their own whereabouts. I wanted to disappear right in that moment. At the same time I wanted to shout to the world, “Why me?” NON-FICTIONAL PARAGRAPH
  • 6. 2. TYPES OF PARAGRAPH
  • 7. 2.1. NON-FICTIONAL DESCRIPTIVE “Let’s walk,” she says serenely, slipping her arm in mine and heading into Central Park. As she strolls along, folks check her out and occasionally point. She is tall, strong, and straight-backed, glowing with vegan health and moving confidently through the crowds in her all-black ensemble. In videos and photos, she looks like she has a prominent jaw, but in person it is much softer, as are her other features (Windex-blue eyes, glossy black hair). Her voice is gentle and melodious, and she looks you square in the eye when she speaks. —from Jancee Dunn’s “The Cole Truth,” Rolling Stone 786, May, 1998.
  • 8. 2.1. NON-FICTIONAL DESCRIPTIVE “Let’s walk,” she says serenely, slipping her arm in mine and heading into Central Park. As she strolls along, folks check her out and occasionally point. She is tall, strong, and straight-backed, glowing with vegan health and moving confidently through the crowds in her all-black ensemble. In videos and photos, she looks like she has a prominent jaw, but in person it is much softer, as are her other features (Windex-blue eyes, glossy black hair). Her voice is gentle and melodious, and she looks you square in the eye when she speaks. —from Jancee Dunn’s “The Cole Truth,” Rolling Stone 786, May, 1998.
  • 9. 2.2. FICTIONAL DESCRIPTIVE It was a tiny, grubby-looking pub. If Hagrid hadn’t pointed it out, Harry wouldn’t have noticed it was there. The people hurrying by didn’t glance at it. Their eyes slid from the big book shop on one side to the record shop on the other as if they couldn’t see the Leaky Cauldron at all. In fact, Harry had the most peculiar feeling that only he and Hagrid could see it. Before he could mention this, Hagrid had steered him inside. For a famous place, it was dark and shabby. A few old women were sitting in a corner, drinking tiny glasses of sherry. One of them was smoking a long pipe. A little man in a top hat was talking to the old bartender, who was quite bald and looked like a toothless walnut. The low buzz of chatter stopped when they walked in. —from Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone, by J. K. Rowling (Scholastic, 1999)
  • 10. 2.2. FICTIONAL DESCRIPTIVE It was a tiny, grubby-looking pub. If Hagrid hadn’t pointed it out, Harry wouldn’t have noticed it was there. The people hurrying by didn’t glance at it. Their eyes slid from the big book shop on one side to the record shop on the other as if they couldn’t see the Leaky Cauldron at all. In fact, Harry had the most peculiar feeling that only he and Hagrid could see it. Before he could mention this, Hagrid had steered him inside. For a famous place, it was dark and shabby. A few old women were sitting in a corner, drinking tiny glasses of sherry. One of them was smoking a long pipe. A little man in a top hat was talking to the old bartender, who was quite bald and looked like a toothless walnut. The low buzz of chatter stopped when they walked in. —from Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone, by J. K. Rowling (Scholastic, 1999)
  • 11. ACTIVITY Write a five-sentence fictional and non-fictional descriptive paragraph in 10 minutes.
  • 12. 2.3. NON-FICTIONAL NARRATIVE During the final years of his life, [Franz] Kafka’s health deteriorated rapidly. In 1923 he fell in love with Dora Dymant and settled in with her in Berlin; he asked Dora’s father for permission to marry her but was refused. In the winter of 1923-24 he moved into a series of clinics and sanitariums. He died, Dora at his side, on June 3, 1924, at a sanitarium in Kierling, near Vienna. His surviving family, including his sisters, all perished several years later in Nazi concentration camps. —from “The Modern Period” of Literature of the Western World, Vol. II, 3rd edition. Eds. Brian Wilkie and James Hunt (Macmillan, 1992)
  • 13. 2.3. NON-FICTIONAL NARRATIVE During the final years of his life, [Franz] Kafka’s health deteriorated rapidly. In 1923 he fell in love with Dora Dymant and settled in with her in Berlin; he asked Dora’s father for permission to marry her but was refused. In the winter of 1923-24 he moved into a series of clinics and sanitariums. He died, Dora at his side, on June 3, 1924, at a sanitarium in Kierling, near Vienna. His surviving family, including his sisters, all perished several years later in Nazi concentration camps. —from “The Modern Period” of Literature of the Western World, Vol. II, 3rd edition. Eds. Brian Wilkie and James Hunt (Macmillan, 1992)
  • 14. 2.4. FICTIONAL NARRATIVE None of it came up until my early thirties, when I got involved with a woman. Her name was Jeanne. We had been classmates at Cornell, both pre-med, both of us seeing someone else. Years afterward I was working for a drug company in N— that was coming under fire for manufacturing an anti-depressant that had bad side effects. We were trying to gather some support for the drug from the medical community, and I met Jeanne again at a conference. She had become a shrink. Excuse me, a psychiatrist. And yes, she had done a lot of research on posttraumatic psychosis and even had a healthy share of Holocaust survivors and incest victims and Vietnam veterans among her clients. —from Pink Slip, by Rita Ciresi (Delta Publishing, 1999)
  • 15. 2.4. FICTIONAL NARRATIVE None of it came up until my early thirties, when I got involved with a woman. Her name was Jeanne. We had been classmates at Cornell, both pre-med, both of us seeing someone else. Years afterward I was working for a drug company in N— that was coming under fire for manufacturing an anti-depressant that had bad side effects. We were trying to gather some support for the drug from the medical community, and I met Jeanne again at a conference. She had become a shrink. Excuse me, a psychiatrist. And yes, she had done a lot of research on posttraumatic psychosis and even had a healthy share of Holocaust survivors and incest victims and Vietnam veterans among her clients. —from Pink Slip, by Rita Ciresi (Delta Publishing, 1999)
  • 16. ACTIVITY Write a five-sentence fictional and non-fictional narrative paragraph in 10 minutes.
  • 17. 2.5. NON-FICTION EXPOSITORY The use of wedding rings has evolved as the latest of all the bridal traditions. From the earliest times, kings used initial rings to sign documents because they were unable to write. Since the initial, or signet, ring had the potency of the king’s signature, anyone possessing a facsimile was put to death immediately. Later, during Greek times, when Alexander the Great died, his vast kingdom was, according to his instructions, divided among his generals. They also got copies of his signet ring. They used these themselves and even allowed trusted advisors to use them when they served as the generals’ proxies. Eventually, rulers even allowed their courtiers to wear copies of their royal signets. Finally, the custom spread among the common people, and nearly everybody who couldn’t write signed official documents with a signet ring. Rings thus became a sign of contractual agreement, which meaning was eventually applied to wedding rings.
  • 18. 2.5. NON-FICTION EXPOSITORY The use of wedding rings has evolved as the latest of all the bridal traditions. From the earliest times, kings used initial rings to sign documents because they were unable to write. Since the initial, or signet, ring had the potency of the king’s signature, anyone possessing a facsimile was put to death immediately. Later, during Greek times, when Alexander the Great died, his vast kingdom was, according to his instructions, divided among his generals. They also got copies of his signet ring. They used these themselves and even allowed trusted advisors to use them when they served as the generals’ proxies. Eventually, rulers even allowed their courtiers to wear copies of their royal signets. Finally, the custom spread among the common people, and nearly everybody who couldn’t write signed official documents with a signet ring. Rings thus became a sign of contractual agreement, which meaning was eventually applied to wedding rings.
  • 19. 2.6. FICTIONAL EXPOSITORY Many of the Jews of Iberian origin had long ago been robbed of the knowledge of their rituals, forced, during the time of the Inquisition, to convert to the Catholic faith. These so-called New Christians were sometimes sincere in their conversions, while others had continued to practice their religion in secret, but after a generation or two they often forgot why they secretly observed these now-obscure rituals. When these secret Jews fled Iberia for the Dutch states, as they began to do in the sixteenth century, many sought to regain Jewish knowledge. My father’s grandfather had been such a man, and he schooled himself in the Jewish traditions—even studying with the great Rabbi Manasseh ben Israel—and he raised his children to honor the Jewish traditions. —from A Conspiracy of Paper, by David Liss (Random House, 2000)
  • 20. 2.6. FICTIONAL EXPOSITORY Many of the Jews of Iberian origin had long ago been robbed of the knowledge of their rituals, forced, during the time of the Inquisition, to convert to the Catholic faith. These so-called New Christians were sometimes sincere in their conversions, while others had continued to practice their religion in secret, but after a generation or two they often forgot why they secretly observed these now-obscure rituals. When these secret Jews fled Iberia for the Dutch states, as they began to do in the sixteenth century, many sought to regain Jewish knowledge. My father’s grandfather had been such a man, and he schooled himself in the Jewish traditions—even studying with the great Rabbi Manasseh ben Israel—and he raised his children to honor the Jewish traditions. —from A Conspiracy of Paper, by David Liss (Random House, 2000)
  • 21. ACTIVITY Write a five-sentence fictional and non-fictional expository paragraph in 10 minutes.
  • 22. 2.7. NON-FICTIONAL ARGUMENTATIVE Nothing gives the English more pleasure, in a quiet but determined sort of way, than to do things oddly. They put milk in their tea, drive on the wrong side of the road, pronounce Cholmondeley as “Chumley” and Belvoir as “Beaver,” celebrate the Queen’s birthday in June even though she was born in April, and dress their palace guards in bearskin helmets that make them look as if, for some private and unfathomable reason, they are wearing fur-lined wastebaskets on their heads. —from Notes from a Small Island, by Bill Bryson (Doubleday, 1995)
  • 23. 2.7. NON-FICTIONAL ARGUMENTATIVE Nothing gives the English more pleasure, in a quiet but determined sort of way, than to do things oddly. They put milk in their tea, drive on the wrong side of the road, pronounce Cholmondeley as “Chumley” and Belvoir as “Beaver,” celebrate the Queen’s birthday in June even though she was born in April, and dress their palace guards in bearskin helmets that make them look as if, for some private and unfathomable reason, they are wearing fur-lined wastebaskets on their heads. —from Notes from a Small Island, by Bill Bryson (Doubleday, 1995)
  • 24. 2.8. FICTIONAL ARGUMENTATIVE Some people say that my wife’s sister is a witch. My father, for one. My brother, for another. And while I will not dispute their use of the term when they are merely alluding to her somewhat contrary nature, I do take issue with them when they use the word to malign what she believes is her calling. After all, it is a calling that to a lesser extent my wife hears as well. No, my sister-in-law is no witch, at least not literally. She, along with my wife and my mother-in-law, is simply a dowser. She is capable of finding underground water with a stick. She is capable of divining underground water with a stick. And unlike my wife and my mother-in-law, she is an active dowser. She does not merely have the power, she uses it.
  • 25. 2.8. FICTIONAL ARGUMENTATIVE Some people say that my wife’s sister is a witch. My father, for one. My brother, for another. And while I will not dispute their use of the term when they are merely alluding to her somewhat contrary nature, I do take issue with them when they use the word to malign what she believes is her calling. After all, it is a calling that to a lesser extent my wife hears as well. No, my sister-in-law is no witch, at least not literally. She, along with my wife and my mother-in-law, is simply a dowser. She is capable of finding underground water with a stick. She is capable of divining underground water with a stick. And unlike my wife and my mother-in-law, she is an active dowser. She does not merely have the power, she uses it.
  • 26. ACTIVITY Write a five-sentence fictional and non-fictional argumentative paragraph in 10 minutes.
  • 27. REFERENCES  Types of Paragraphs. Writers’ Digest University. Retrieved August 18, 2014 from http://www.writersonlineworkshops.com/resource s/types-of-paragraphs/