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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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Essay Doctorate
Four questions answered in paragraph style
This paper is a paper that covers the basics of information systems. There are four essay questions. The first is about information systems and their pros and cons. The second is about agency theory and transaction cost theory. The third is about the difference between HTML and XMl, and the fourth is about the five layers
Paper Undergraduate
Workarounds in Healthcare Facilities
Abstract Workarounds are fast becoming a common phenomenon in the health sector. Although they may promote efficiency and convenience in solving temporary problems, their regular use could be detrimental to the patients, as well as the facility. This text examines the benefits and costs of workarounds, and outlines the possible ways of addressing the same.
Essay Doctorate
Death of languages: causes and documentation
This paper is about language death. The paper answers a few questions, such as how language death occurs, what are the contributing factors, and that sort of thing. Also, an opinion is rendered about whether it is worth saving languages. And discussed is the loss of the window on the world that each language represents.
Essay Undergraduate
Self-Assessment the Effective Use of Qualitative Research
This paper is a self-assessment written by a student who has just completed a course on different methods of qualitative research. The types of qualitative research covered included grounded theory, phenomenology, narrative approaches, case studies, and ethnography. The student discusses how he or she has benefited from the course and how it will prepare him or her for his or her dissertation.
Paper Doctorate
Grapes of Wrath John Steinbeck\'s Novel, \"The
During the 1930's Oklahoma suffered an eological disaster, the Dust Bowl. This forced hundreds of thousands of migrant farmworkers to seek employment in California. There they faced an unfair system that maintained the wealthy landowners at the expense of the common workers. John Steinbeck, in "the Grapes of Wrath," described this calamity through the story of a single family and the hardships they faced. In the end the book was a call for the American public to reform society into a place where Americans cared for each other.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Ego psychology: theory and clinical applications
Ego psychology is rooted in Sigmunds Freud's breakthrough concepts of his time relating to the id, ego, and superego. Ego psychology has evolved since his time and relies heavily on psychoanalysis. Freud originally conceptualized three regions of the mind. The id, which represents what is completely unconscious to us and serves as a pleasure center that seeks immediate gratification. The ego, which is a secondary process, that tries to reconcile the demands of other parts of the mind with the natural world and the social constructs in which it operates. Finally, the superego has an idealistic nature that most people consider someone's "conscience". These forces of the mind, among others such as instincts, help describe the dynamics of personality that can motivate people to perform certain behaviors.
Research Paper Doctorate
Rose for Emily\" Emily Takes the Life
¶ … Rose for Emily" Emily takes the life of her lover, Homer Barron, by poisoning him with arsenic. By doing so, she erases any hope that she has for getting married and having children.
Research Paper Doctorate
U.S. History the Razor\'s Edge by Sommerset
The Razor's Edge by Sommerset Maugham is superficially the story of Larry Darryl, a war veteran. The apparent protagonist decides to leave his family's comfortable place in Chicago "society," because of the horrors he…
Research Paper Doctorate
Anthony Blond in His Book a Scandalous
Anthony Blond in his book A Scandalous History of the Roman Emperors (New York: Carroll & Graf, 2000), a book originally published in 1994, the author seems to have written a history of Rome for the current tabloid age,…
Research Paper Doctorate
Ethnicity and American Identity the Basic Conception
The basic conception of American identity in the years between Cahan's Yekl, Yezierska's The Bread Givers, and Morrison's The Bluest Eye, is essentially unchanged. Each of the characters in these novels face a…