Probably a glimps of the main protagonist and/or main antagonist. And if you want, an important event that triggers the entire story, a foreboding future and/or the setting of the story. The list is endless but you don't want them to read a list. You want them to hook into your story in the introduction. Bear that in mind ;)
An introduction is the beginning paragraph of any written piece of work. It explains what the writing piece is about and what will be talked about throughout the piece.
(noun)
[in-trow-duck-shun]
This means the beginning of a speech or a piece of writing.
This can also be when people first meet, and your introduction is how you present yourself to them, or how a person presents themself to you. People usually base people off how they act when they first meet, sometimes.
An Introduction is were before you say or do something you start with a introduction
Example: Hi my name is jack and I'm going to talk to you about windows 7.Thats a introduction
The beginning of a story:)
An introduction line is the kick off point for your story, it's supposed to be something that catches the reader's attention. It could be intriguing, twisted, or something that just doesn't make sense unless you read on.
If it's in first person, it could be the main character commenting on something, this tells you what kind of person they are. The only example I can think of off the top of my head is the opening line to 'Hating Alison Ashley' which I read four years ago and it still sticks.
'I will never forgive my mother for calling me Erica with a surname like Yurken.'
Or an ordinary one.
'"Where is he?"
Barney hopped from one foot to the other as he clambered down from the trains peering in vain through the white-faced crowds flooding eagerly to the St Austell ticket barrier.
~ Over Sea Under Stone - Susan Cooper
Then there's the opening to 1984. ~ George Orwell
'It was a bright cold day in April, and the clocks were striking thirteen.'
Already, that's a little strange.
It is hard to think up something like that, try online sites which have writing prompts, or starting lines, pick one that makes you think of yours, and use or modify that.
But it's a good idea to tell the people if you're going to use it first.
I hope I helped a bit.
Like a Catch phrase or an introduction line. Something that'll explain the whole story in a single line. Well that's what I think...If this helps then cool! But if it doesn't then sue me and I'm sorry... LOLZ=]
Essentially, all a prelude does is serve as an introduction to the story.
An introduction should do several things. Most importantly, it should tell the reader what the report is about. It should also provide an attention grabber, such as an interesting story or relevent statistic. It should then flow, or provide a transistion to the body of the report.
It is right after the Introduction.
A minor story that runs inside the main story is called a sub-plot.
There are technically two first parts of a plot line. It starts with an introduction, but the rising action is usually directly behind it.
the begining of a story
yes it is a good story introduction is when it makes the reader feel like reading more
Like a Catch phrase or an introduction line. Something that'll explain the whole story in a single line. Well that's what I think...If this helps then cool! But if it doesn't then sue me and I'm sorry... LOLZ=]
when he saw the dog
Essentially, all a prelude does is serve as an introduction to the story.
An introduction should do several things. Most importantly, it should tell the reader what the report is about. It should also provide an attention grabber, such as an interesting story or relevent statistic. It should then flow, or provide a transistion to the body of the report.
B. Efficiency is increased.
The setting of a story.
the setting of the story
BS
Introduction Exposition (formal name)