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DESCRIPTIVE
ESSAY
Professor Stevens, English 21 |
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The purpose of a descriptive essay is to describe a person, place, or thing in such vivid detail that the reader can easily form a precise mental picture of what is being written about. The author may accomplish this by using imaginative language, interesting comparisons, and images that appeal to the senses.
Read this
sample descriptive essay, and then read the notes below.
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The subject of the sample essay is fairly ordinarya ride on a Ferris wheel. The author makes it interesting, however, by comparing the Ferris wheel to a monstrous creature.
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The author makes good use of fresh and varied vocabulary. For example, in the first paragraph alone, she uses verbs that create excitement like "fascinate," "amaze," and "terrify." In the second paragraph she uses a variety of terms to describe the machine such as "monstrosity," "mythical beast," "amazing dinosaur," "fire-breathing dragon."
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The author uses her senses to describe the scenehow the ride looks, sounds, smells, and feels. The ride is "huge, smoky, noisy" and its engines "drone" like the roar of a dragon. On the ride, she gets a "rush of adrenaline" and a "lump in her throat," she feels immobile and then weightless.
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The essay is well organized. The introduction begins with a general statement, "I have always been fascinated by carnival rides," and ends with a more specific statement of what the essay will be about, "the thrill and excitement of a carnival ride keeps me coming back for more." The body of the essay is composed of several paragraphs that describe the Ferris wheel, the way it seems from the ground and the way it feels to ride on one. The conclusion restates the main idea of the essay, that the author continues to find carnival rides thrilling and exciting.
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Descriptive Essay Sample |
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I have always been fascinated by carnival rides.
It amazes me that average, ordinary people eagerly trade in the serenity of the
ground for the chance to be tossed through the air like vegetables in a food
processor. It amazes me that at some time in history someone thought that people
would enjoy this, and that person invented what must have been the first of
these terrifying machines. For me, it is precisely the thrill and excitement of
having survived the ride that keeps me coming back for more.
My first experience with a carnival ride was a
Ferris wheel at a local fair. Looking at that looming monstrosity spinning the
life out of its sardine-caged occupants, I was dumbstruck. It was huge, smoky,
noisy and not a little intimidating. Ever since that initial impression became
fossilized in my imagination many years ago, these rides have reminded me of
mythical beasts, amazing dinosaurs carrying off their screaming passengers like
sacrificial virgins. Even the droning sound of their engines brings to mind the
great roar of a fire-breathing dragon with smoke spewing from its exhaust-pipe
nostrils.
The first ride on one of these fantastic
beasts gave me an instant rush of adrenaline. As the death-defying ride started,
a lump in my throat pulsed like a dislodged heart ready to walk the plank. As
the ride gained speed, the resistance to gravity built up against my body until
I was unable to move. An almost imperceptible pause as the wheel reached the top
of its climb allowed my body to relax in a brief state of normalcy. Then there
was an assault of stomach-turning weightlessness as the machine continued its
rotation and I descended back toward the earth. A cymbal-like crash vibrated
through the air as the wheel reached bottom, and much to my surprise I began to
rise again.
Each new rotation gave me more confidence in
the churning machine. Every ascent left me elated that I had survived the
previous death-defying fall. When another nerve-wracking climb failed to follow
the last exhilarating descent and the ride was over, I knew I was hooked.
Physically and emotionally drained, I followed my fellow passengers down the
clanging metal steps to reach the safety of my former footing. I had been
spared, but only to have the opportunity to ride again.
My fascination with these fantastic flights
is deeply engrained in my soul. A trip on the wonderful Ferris wheel never fails
to thrill me. Although I am becoming older and have less time, or less
inclination, to play, the child-like thrill I have on a Ferris wheel continues
with each and every ride.
This essay is reproduced with the permission
of its author, Elisabeth McCarthy. No part of this essay may be reproduced. |
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