1. "How lead"- begins with the 'how' of the story
"Why lead"- begins with the cause of the story } All used often
"What lead"- begins with the fact of the story.
2. These leads are commonly used for a good reason, to bring in attention from consumers and browsers, begging them to know about the full story.
3. Direct Quote: A quote "in which you copy an author's words directly from the text and use that exact wording in your essay." -Unilearning
4. The use of these quotes can change up your written progress, and match it with what you were writing about to provide examples or specifics to explain the idea best.
5. May be longer than just a sentence
Should have attribution after the first sentence of the quote
It should be worded: senior Bob Rodriguez said.
and not: said senior Bob Rodriguez. (Unless you have an unusually long title)
Do not place two people's direct quotes next to each other without a transition.
6. Attribution: It identifies a source or cause of something; the person who said the quote first.
7. The form should be: 'John Appleseed said' and not 'said John Appleseed'.
8. A word or phrase that inter joins two or more ideas together.
9. Lead
Direct Quote
IQ Transition
10. Attract and succeed in bringing the readers attention
Keep them intrigued
Provide them facts
Explain the story thoroughly
Keep the paragraphs short and simple with valid facts
Give good transitions in between paragraphs
Vary its sentence structure
11. People suing/copyrighting your work
Making the story too long and not straight to the point
Putting a very biased opinion and losing customers
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