“Image Grammar”

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“Image Grammar” By Harry R. Noden

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“Image Grammar”. By Harry R. Noden. “ An ineffective writer sees broad impressions that evoke vague labels; a powerful writer visualizes specific details that create a literary virtual reality.” Harry R. Noden Image Grammar. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of “Image Grammar”

Page 1: “Image Grammar”

“Image Grammar”

By Harry R. Noden

Page 2: “Image Grammar”

“ An ineffective writer sees broad impressions that evoke vague labels; a powerful writer visualizes specific details that create a literary virtual reality.”

Harry R. Noden

Image Grammar

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“ An amateur writer tells a story. A pro shows the story, creates a picture to look at instead of just words to read. A good author writes with a camera, not with a pen.”

Novelist Robert Newton Peck

Secrets of Successful Fiction

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Painting with Five Basic Brush Strokes

• The participle• The absolute• The appositive• Adjectives shifted out

of order• Action verbs

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Participles = an –ing verb tagged on the beginning or end of a sentence

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“The diamond-scaled snakes attacked their prey.”

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“Hissing, slithering, and coiling, the diamond-scaled snakes attacked their prey.”

“Hissing their forked red tongues and coiling their cold bodies, the diamond-scaled snakes attacked their prey.”

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Absolutes = a two-word combination – a noun and an –ing or –ed verb added onto a sentence

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“The mountain climber edged along the cliff.”

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“The mountain climber edged along the cliff, hands shaking, feet trembling.”

“Hands shaking, feet trembling, the mountain climber edged along the cliff.”

“Feet trembling on the snow-covered rocks, the mountain climber edged along the cliff.

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Appositive – a noun that adds a second image to a preceding noun

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“The raccoon enjoys eating turtle eggs.”

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“The raccoon, a scavenger, enjoys eating turtle eggs.

The raccoon, a midnight scavenger who roams lake shorelines in search of food, enjoys eating turtle eggs.

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Adjectives out of order = amplify the details of an image

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“The large, red-eyed, angry bull charged the intruder.”

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The large bull, red-eyed and angry, charged the intruder.

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By eliminating passive voice and reducing being verbs, writers can energize action images.

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The runaway horse was ridden into town by a blond haired beauty.

The blond haired beauty rode the runaway horse into the town.

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The gravel road was on the right side of the barn.

The gravel road curled around the right side of the barn.

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