Four Types of Writing
Four Types of Writing
A writer's style is a reflection of his or her personality, unique voice, and way of approaching the audience and readers.
However, every piece writers write is for a specific purpose-for example, writers may want to explain how something works or persuade people to
agree with their point of view. While there are as many writer's styles as there are writers, there are only four general purposes that lead someone
to write a piece, and these are known as the four styles, or types, of writing. Knowing all four different types and their usages is important for any
writer.
1. EXPOSITORY
Expository writing explains or informs. It talks about a subject without giving opinions.
Expository writing's main purpose is to explain. It is a subject-oriented writing style, in which authors focus on telling you about a given topic or
subject without voicing their personal opinions. These types of essays or articles furnish you with relevant facts and figures but do not include their
opinions. This is one of the most common types of writing. You always see it in textbooks and how-to articles. The author just tells you about a
given subject, such as how to do something.
Key Points:
Textbook writing.
How-to articles.
Recipes.
News stories (not including opinion or editorial pieces).
Business, technical, or scientific writing.
Example:
Many people associate the taste of pumpkins with fall, In October, companies from Starbucks to McDonalds roll out their pumpkin-flavored lattes
and desserts. Here is how to make an easy pumpkin pie using only five ingredients. First, make sure you have all of the ingredients.
2. DESCRIPTIVE
Example:
In good descriptive writing, the author will not just say: "The vampire killed his lover."
He or she will change the sentence, focusing on more details and descriptions, like: "The bloody, red-eyed vampire, sunk his rust-colored teeth the
soft skin of his lover and ended her life."
Key Points:
Poetry
Journal or diary writing
Nature writing
Descriptive passages in fiction
Example:
The iPhone 6 is unexpectedly light. While size of its screen is bigger than those of the iPhones that came before, it is thinner, and its smooth,
rounded body is made of aluminum, stainless steel, and glass. The casing comes in a whitish silver, gold, or a color the company calls "space
gray," the color of the lead of a pencil, with darker gray accents.
3. PERSUASIVE
Persuasive writing tries to bring other people around to your point of view.
Persuasive writing's main purpose is to convince. Unlike expository writing, persuasive writing contains the opinions and biases of the author. To
convince others to agree with the author's point of view, persuasive writing contains justifications and reasons. It is often used in letters of
complaint, advertisements or commercials, affiliate marketing pitches, cover letters, and newspaper opinion and editorial pieces.
Key Points:
Example:
Following the 2012 Olympic Games hosted in London, the UK Trade and Investment department reported a 29.9 billion boost to the economy,
although it is expensive to host the Olympics, if done right they can provide real jobs and economic growth. This city should consider placing a bid
to host the Olympics.
4. NARRATIVE
Key Points:
Novels
Short stories
Novellas
Poetry
Autobiographies or biographies
Anecdotes
Oral histories
Example: