Advanced Writing Techniques Worksheets

What Are Some Advanced Writing Techniques?

There are millions of writers out there in the world. From a very young age, we are taught to express ourselves through writing. While we all write essays, articles, stories, and letters, not all of us excel in this skill. Writing is, indeed, an art. It takes much more than just a perspective and the right words to create powerful pieces. Advanced writing is all about presenting your ideas in a way that it has maximum influence on the readers. There are several advanced-writing techniques that can help you excel in this skill and express yourself through sentences that help you stand out from the crowd. 1. Achieving Cohesion - When it comes to advanced writing, achieving cohesion is essential. You need to check for repetition, synonymy, antonymy, collocation, enumeration, parallelism, transitions, and use of pronouns. By checking all these factors will help you create paragraph unity with sentence cohesion. 2. Aligning topics and subjects - Another critical aspect of advanced writing is to have a strong link between the topic you are covering and the subject of your literary piece. 3. Avoiding Long Openings and Delays in Topic Introduction - Exceptional literary pieces are those that give an idea to the reader of what they will be reading in the first few sentences. You need to revise long openings and get to your topic as soon as you can. 4. Concise Writing - One thing to note here that advanced literary pieces are where the writer uses a concise way to express the ideas. You need to develop a habit of replacing long phrases with single words. These are the four most useful advanced writing strategies and techniques that can help you ace the skill of expressing through writing essays and articles.

Alliteration

Alliteration is the repetition of a beginning sound of two or more words in a sentence to emphasize a description or a point. Alliteration makes writing fun, creative, and interesting! Use alliteration to describe the following people, places, or ideas.


Expanding Sentences

The technique of expanding sentences creates vivid, interesting, and detail filled thoughts. Follow similar patterns of expanding sentences to alter and develop creative sentences.


Hyperbole

Hyperbole is a style of writing when something is extremely exaggerated. Hyperbole is similar to metaphors in that one thing is said to be something else. The use of hyperbole emphasizes thoughts and ideas. Read each sentence. Change each to a hyperbole, which is an exaggerated statement to emphasize the idea.


Idioms

Idioms are words whose meaning is different than the actual word. The use of idioms in writing creates vivid and colorful work! Read each idiom. Match each idiom and meaning by writing a capital letter to indicate the match.




Idioms

Idioms are words whose meaning is different than the actual word. The use of idioms in writing creates vivid and colorful work! Write sentences for the following idioms.


Metaphors

Metaphors are phrases that compare unlike things yet say that one is like the other. Complete each sentence below by creating a metaphor!



Metaphoric Poetry

Metaphoric poetry delivers language in interesting and fun ways. Metaphoric poetry shows compares items in an unrelated way. Create a metaphor and turn it into a poem. Remember, the poem doesn't need to rhyme.


Personification

Personification is the technique of assigning animate qualities to inanimate objects. Think of something human about each of the following objects. Write a sentence about the item, using the technique of personification.




Forms of Poetry

We look at all different forms of poetry and write our own. Cinquains are a type of poem. They are arranged in the following structure. Haiku poetry is usually written about nature. A title is always included. A couplet form of poetry follows a pattern of rhyme. A limerick is a form of poetry that is usually humorous. They follow a pattern of rhyme. An ode is a form of writing that is usually written about someone or something. Usually, the subject is referred to with fondness yet may offer an amusing tone.






Sequence Words

Some words help show a sequence on how to do something. Some such words include first, second, then, next, and finally.






Similes

Similes are phrases that compare two things that are not alike to help describe one of them. Similes often use the words like or as when making the comparison.







Transition Words

Some words are used to clarify the connect between two ideas or words. One use of them is to persuade or influence a person’s opinion by pointing out additional information. Examples of transition words: for example, yet, thus, beside, instead of, equally important, similarly, on the contrary, for instance, and in short. Pretend you are trying to persuade your parent/guardian to purchase a bike for you. Provide reasons and examples for (pro) and against (con) owning a bike.