Q.1.
In Louis Sachar's novel, , the narrator's wealthy uncle attends a bridge club which is described this way:  'If you were expecting a fancy club, with plush carpeting, leather chairs, wood panelling, and people sipping brandy and smoking cigars as they discuss the stock market, then you've come to the wrong place.'  What is the effect of this description?
Q.2.
What does it mean to write a 'sensory' description?
Q.3.
In the opening chapter to John Steinbeck's , we find this description:  'A stilted heron laboured up into the air and pounded down river.'   This is a good example of...
Q.4.
What is the aim or purpose of writing descriptively?
Q.5.
In Charlie Connelly's , we read this description of the approach to the town, Haugesund:  'The roaring wind buffeted my progress and caused the sea to boil away to my left in huge fans of spume.  The tarmac wound between enormous rocks and the wind whistled tunelessly through the coarse, flattened grass.  Somewhere in the distance a rope clanged against a flagpole...'  Which word best describes the mood evoked by this description?
Q.6.
Descriptive writing often makes use of figurative language.  Which of the following is NOT an example of figurative language?
Q.7.
Which of the following would be most effective?
Q.8.
'When the hard clay is swept clean as a floor and the fine sand around the edges lined with tiny, irregular grooves, anyone can come and sit and look up into the elm tree and wait for the breezes that never come inside the house.'  In Alice Walker's description of the 'outdoor living room', from 'Everyday Use', which words are adjectives?
Q.9.
In Harper Lee's , the servant Calpurnia is described thus:  'She was all angles and bones; she was near-sighted; she squinted; her hand was wide as a bed-slat and twice as hard.'  Which of the following examples of figurative language has Lee used here?
Q.10.
Calpurnia's character description describes her hand as being 'wide as a bed-slat and twice as hard'.  What does this description accomplish?