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Personal Narrative

Write a personal narrative of 500–750 words. Your narrative should describe an event or experience that was important to you. Remember that your personal narrative will read like a story with you as the narrator. Write with your conclusion in mind, and include all the details your readers will need to understand the narrative and its ending.

• a beginning, a middle, and an end

• first-person-point-of-view narration

• a setting

• dialogue to draw readers into the scene and to give information about actions and characters

• precise, vivid language that shows rather than tells

• events in logical order with appropriate transitions

• an end that includes your narrative's point or the meaning it holds for you

• specific nouns, verbs, adjectives, and adverbs

• a variety of sentence types

User Juan Munhoes Junior
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1 Answer

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13 votes

Answer:

Step-by-step explanation:

A personal narrative, and especially the one instructed with this prompt, is a piece of writing from the writer's perspective and own experiences. While writing can be tricky sometimes, I'm afraid only you can do this.

Here are some things to keep in mind though:

Write about something that interests you or you really enjoyed experiencing - this makes the words flow way easier because you're excited to share the moment you're focusing on

Because the instructions say to write of an event important to you, but to write it with you as a narrator and to create a setting and plot, take this exciting moment you want to share and tell it like a thrilling story (like you're telling it to your friends and you really want them on the edge of their seats with excitement). Writing this way can make the narrative come together a lot more fluidly (and way more fun to write).

Because it is a 500-750 word narrative, don't make it bigger than it has to be (both in writing, and how you think of it before you start). Paragraphs can be short, sentences don't have to be complex - don't overthink it.

'Precise, vivid language' can seem a little overwhelming, but think about how you would describe one of your favorite things to a friend. Would you describe the size of it? The color? How it feels, tastes, smells, etc? That is vivid language and shows rather than tells - it doesn't have to be intense, just paints a picture.

I hope this helps!

User Trevis
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