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Description
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Description as a mode of writing appears across nearly every academic discipline, making it one of the most fundamental skills students develop in English and composition courses. Unlike purely argumentative writing, descriptive work requires a writer to render a subject clearly and precisely so that a reader can form an accurate mental picture or understanding of it. What makes description academically interesting is its versatility: it can anchor analysis, support argument, and establish context. The sample papers here reflect that range, covering subjects as varied as aviation safety, homeless populations, software development methodologies, and consumer behavior, showing how descriptive writing operates across technical, social, and humanistic fields.

The approaches taken in papers on this topic vary considerably. Some focus on concrete physical environments, such as a hospital waiting room, where sensory detail and spatial organization carry the writing. Others take a more process-oriented angle, describing how systems, organizations, or methodologies function. Still others blend description with review or comparison, as seen in papers covering intercultural communication models, Romanticism as an artistic movement, and leadership frameworks like GLOBE. This variety reflects how description rarely exists in isolation but instead supports broader analytical or informational purposes.

A strong descriptive essay begins with a clearly scoped subject and a consistent point of focus, avoiding the common pitfall of cataloguing details without a controlling purpose. Evidence in descriptive writing typically takes the form of specific, well-chosen details rather than generalizations. Writers should ensure that every detail serves the essay's central aim, whether that is to inform, to analyze, or to argue, rather than simply listing observations without connecting them to a larger sense of meaning.

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Paper Masters
Bell, Carolyn Shaw. (1995). What Is Poverty?
¶ … Bell, Carolyn Shaw. (1995). What is Poverty? The American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 54(2) 161-173.
Paper Undergraduate
Critique of Aria: a memoir of bilingual childhood
Richard Rodriguez, the author of "Aria: A Memoir of a Bilingual Childhood," uses his personal experience as a literary scholar and teacher as well as the son of Mexican immigrants living in California to take a firm…
Paper Undergraduate
Gothic Period Cultural and Construction
Historians generally define the periodization of the history of Western Europe during the Middle Ages into three eras: the Early Middle Ages (5th-11th Centuries AD); the High Middle Ages (1000-1300 AD); and the Late…
Paper Undergraduate
Impacts of Facebook on the young generation
¶ … young generation (Chapter one and two)
Research Paper Doctorate
Behavioral Finance Human Interaction a Study of the Decision-Making Processes Impacting Financial Markets Information Processing
Behavioral Finance and Human Interaction a Study of the Decision-Making
Research Paper Doctorate
Economics and finance concepts for MBA study
disrupting America's economic system is a fundamental objective of terrorists
Paper Doctorate
Sociological theories of Marx, Weber, Durkheim, and Mosca
The theory of history from Marx, Durkheim, Weber, and Mosca- There are a number of different modern social theories regarding the nature of society, social change, human's place within society and the idea of how…
Paper Undergraduate
Shooting an Elephant by George
¶ … Shooting an Elephant by George Orwell
Paper Undergraduate
Physical education teacher burnout and professional concerns
¶ … Aaker (1991, p13) it is the general aim of all researchers not only to discover new information but as much as possible to build on what other people have already done in the field.
Paper Doctorate
Adult Different Views of Adulthood
Different Views of Adulthood in the American Short Story