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Text Types English Language and Literature A

The document provides an overview of 19 different text types and their key features, including advertisements, recruitment campaigns, speeches, opinion columns, comic strips, satirical cartoons, magazine articles, interviews, blogs, information texts, infographics, scientific articles, news reports, descriptive passages, diaries, letters, travel writing, advisory texts, and texts for children.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
47 views

Text Types English Language and Literature A

The document provides an overview of 19 different text types and their key features, including advertisements, recruitment campaigns, speeches, opinion columns, comic strips, satirical cartoons, magazine articles, interviews, blogs, information texts, infographics, scientific articles, news reports, descriptive passages, diaries, letters, travel writing, advisory texts, and texts for children.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Text Types English Language and Literature A

Paper 1 Prep

1) Advertisements
Tend to be persuasive
Key features:
➢ Problem and benefit: the success of any advert depends upon appealing to the desires of its
readers
➢ Image: tells a visual narrative, tactic such as shock value or sex sells
➢ Slogan and copy: Slogans are short, catchy, memorable and have a relationship with the
image this is called anchoring. Typographical features: bold fonts, underlined words.
➢ Association: ads sell products but also values. Abstract concepts. Symbolism: objects,
settings, people.
➢ Testimonial: satisfied quotations of customers. Eg. Celebrity testimonials.
➢ Advertising claims: weasel words, scientific claims, vague language, or bandwagon claims.
Keep an eye out for jargon that sounds impressive but doesn’t communicate meaning.
➢ Persuasion: Ethos, Pathos and logos. Ethos = trustworthiness of the speaker. Pathos: appeals
to emotions, logos appeals to sense of logic.
■ Charity appeals sub type
● Persuasive: take action PATHOS, ETHOS, LOGOS
● Pathos: appeal to emotions such as: anger, pity, guilt, sympathy so
you are more likely to respond.
● Shock tactics to persuade the reader.
● Facts and statistics to create a trustworthy persona
● Metonymy: social problems like hunger and poverty → introduce
you to a single individual who represents where the donations are
going to
● Direct address: strong connection, eye contact is visual direct
address.
2) Recruitment Campaigns
➢ Persuasive: direct address and imperatives
➢ Visuals: muti-modal
➢ Slogans: catchy. Pay attention to typography, fonts and emphasised words.
➢ Pathos: core of campaign is often emotional to elicit feelings: patriotism, duty or guilt if not
signing up.
➢ Card stacking: not showing the downsides of joining up.
➢ Simplification: reduce complex issues to simple solutions. Invoke stereotypes.
➢ Symbolism: metonymy where an individual stands for a whole.

3) Speeches
➢ Ethos: speaker establishes credibility and alludes to moral, social or spiritual leader with
whom the audience can’t disagree.
➢ Logos: clear, reasonable arguments, facts and statistics and quoting experts in the field to
establish a logical appeal.
➢ Pathos: emotive language, imagery to help audience empathise with often vulnerable
people.
➢ Persuasive: take action
➢ Direct address: attempts to compliment the listener.
➢ Modality: modal verbs such as “must”, “need”, “should”, “might”, reveal the speaker’s degree
of certainty.
➢ Rhetorical devices: rhythmical, structural, auditory and linguistic tricks.
➢ Logical fallacies: glittering generalisations, simplification and slippery slope.

4) Opinion Columns
➢ Controversial topic
➢ OP-ED
➢ Perspective: personal viewpoint, the first person is most commonly adopted.
➢ Solid arguments: facts, statistics and information to convince you of the writer’s viewpoint.
Opinions backed up by studies, research or evidence of some kind. Assertion where writer
presents opinion as fact.
➢ Anecdotes: thoughtful approach to the topic at hand. Hook into the main article.
➢ Structure: Opinion and then develop opinion with evidence and end is strong and certain
reiterating the writer’s position.
➢ Register and tone: often formal, but writer can adopt an irreverent tone, be passionate,
conversational, friendly, challenging, even sarcastic.
➢ Concession: acknowledgement that the writer’s opinion is flawed in some way.

5) Comic Strips
➢ Purpose: to entertain, but also to inform by making a serious point about a local or global
issue.
➢ Structure: comics and cartoons are drawn in panels, arranged in sequence and read in a
linear fashion. White space between the panels is a gutter.
➢ Exposition: story is presented as captions
➢ Speech And thought bubbles: internal and external dialogue
➢ Mechanics: spatial mechanics, temporal mechanics.
➢ Artistic style: Are the pictures crisp, heavy, weighty, light, cartoony, realistic, bright, dark?
Words that describe the mood and tone useful when analysing graphic weight (shading and
contrast) and saturation (brightness).
➢ Emanata: dots, lines, exclamation marks, onomatopoeia
➢ Cartoonification: Realism: photorealistic or lifelike to simplified
➢ Punchline: the main idea is revealed in the last panel.

6) Satirical cartoons
★ Purpose: to ridicule, lampoon or criticise a specific target.
★ Irony: contradict one’s words.
★ Caricature: people are simplified, exaggerated or distorted for effects. Synecdoche whereby a
part of something is made to stand for the whole.
★ Symbolism: objects, icons, colours.
★ Allusion: historical or political references to events outside the text.
★ Tone: scathing, carcastic, pointed, or critical.

7)Magazine Articles
➔ Headline: bold text that act as a hook
➔ Images: photographs mostly posed
➔ Layout: box outs, bullet points, ears
➔ Entertainment: Information may be displayed in an appealing way using pull quotes and
subheadings.
➔ Buzzwords: up-to-date, relevant and current means popular jargon at time of publication.
➔ Interactive features: Embedded videos, hyperlinks, and tabs.
➔ Embedded Interviews: quotations of expers.

8) Interviews
● Question- Answer: quotations (direct speech)
● Register: spoken conversation; colloquialisms, idioms, contradictions, and even jokes.
● Topics: leading questions
● Perspective: one-sided view → highly subjective, assertive statements

9) Blogs
Viewpoint: first person
Purpose: individual interests or concerns so purpose is flexible. Seek to inform or Entertain?
Diction: specialist vocabulary or use of technical terms
Visuals: texts with cartoons, images, or photographs

10) Information texts


➢ Neutral language: formal or semiformal with a neutral tone
➢ Diction: specialist language, jargon, technical terms
➢ Layout: box outs, lists, bullet points, page dividers
➢ Facts and statistics: percentages, graphs, charts, numbers
➢ Typography: fonts, capitalisations, bold or italicised words, underlined words
➢ Images: diagrams

11) Infographics
★ Audience: designed as widespread audiences
★ Simplification: simplify complex knowledge or data through summaries, bullet points,
images, or captions.
★ Illustrations: Icons that symbolise ideas
★ Copy: headlines, labels and snippets (brief chucks of text)
★ Structure: visual narratives, sequence of events.
★ Design: eye -catching so colour, typography, font, design features.
12) Scientific articles
❖ Informative: facts and statistics and clear explanations.
❖ Diction: specialist vocabulary
❖ Comparisons: similes and comparisons
❖ Visuals: photographs, diagrams, charts, graphs
❖ Credibility: research, authoritative sources, quotes by experts.
❖ Structure: linear and non-linear structure.

13) News Reports


Masthead: name of newspaper, date of publication and price.
Headline: tone and angle of story: slammer; pun; alliteration; elliptical headlines
Visuals: create bias
Copy: Sensationalism, vague language, emotive language, euphemism
Embedded Interviews: witness recounts, expert opinions and statements from authority
figures.
Bias: selection bias, name calling to use of certain facts and statistics.
Figurative language: metaphor, simile, hyperbole, sensationalism, exaggeration, distorting
reality

14) Descriptive Passages


➔ Diction: concrete language and precise language
➔ Imagery: visual sense, sensory images, auditory, tactile, kinaesthetic and even olfactory.
➔ Figurative Comparisons: similes, metaphors and personifications
➔ Modifiers: adjectives and adverbs
➔ Perspective: outsider perspective, insider perspective

15) Diaries
a) Viewpoint: first person
b) Perspective: Confessional tone
c) Structure: chronological, flashbacks,
d) Register and tone: informal or semi formal
e) Colloquialism: figures of speech
16) Letters
a) Name and address: sender and receiver's address
b) Purpose: to seek advice, complain, or to connect with loved one
c) Register: formal or informal. Tone can be formal or intimate
d) Salutation: “Dear…” or “To whom this may concern”
e) Sign off: “Sincerely”
17) Travel writing
a) Viewpoint: personal experiences, first person
b) Perspective: an outsider’s perspective, insider’s perspective
c) Structure: chronological, linear, past-present
d) Information: facts, figures, names and dates, historical or architectural or
geographical
e) Description: destination tantalising: visual imagery, vivid description or figurative
comparisons
f) Visuals: photographs, maps, floor plans
18) Advisory Texts
a) Tone: authoritative, reasonable, commanding or trustworthy.
b) Tense: the imperative tense can be recognised by verb.
c) Modality: “must”, will, should, ought, transmit strength of feelings
d) Credibility: expert sources, research, scientific evidence
e) Register: formal and persuasive.
f) Structure: cause and effect, step-by-step guides or linear structures.
19) Texts for children
a) Allegory: symbolism
b) Diction: easy synonyms and rhymes
c) Visuals: colourful
d) Fable: anthropomorphised animals who stand in for human characters.
e) Didactic: teach a lesson or moral

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