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A nonfiction book about the history of the Civil War
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an essay about the rise and fall of the Roman Empire
===APEX===
Here are some example of expository text:
Information
explains something
true facts
text books
FEATURES:
illustration
pictures
words
numbers
bold print
italics
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Expository speech is meant to clarify or inform, which means about any topic can be used. Often current events and hot topics make good subject for an expository speech.
Some examples:
An expository text is something that is used to give the reader information or instructions. Some examples would include scientific journals, directions to a place, a guide on putting something together, a textbook, or even a newspaper.
Expository text informs people. Or, you could say, as a memory cue, expository explains. It tells them about a topic, books, cats, instruments, anything that can be explained. These essays do not use opinions. They have only facts.
An expository text is anything written to explain something without providing an opinion on the subject. What you are reading right now is an expository text as is any instruction manual, text book, etc.
Expository texts are pieces of non-fiction. Some examples are encyclopedias, newspapers, maps, journals, science, social studies, and math textbooks, atlases, guides, and biographies.
Technical writing is usually about how to do something, or how something works. An instruction manual about how to make a light bulb is an example of technical writing. Expository writing "explains" something. A book about how the light bulb was invented is an example of expository writing.
No. Expository writing is generally directed at the public and is usually written in the third person. Occasionally, a piece of expository writing may be in the first person, for example, if the author wants to be 'chatty'.
akdolepara
no
it mean to write a expository writing