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  2. Text types - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Text_types

    Text types in literature form the basic styles of writing. Factual texts merely seek to inform, whereas literary texts seek to entertain or otherwise engage the reader by using creative language and imagery. There are many aspects to literary writing, and many ways to analyse it, but four basic categories are descriptive, narrative, expository ...

  3. Nonprocedural language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nonprocedural_language

    Nonprocedural language. NPL (for NonProcedural Language) was a relational database language developed by T.D. Truitt et al. [1][2] in 1980 for Apple II and, later, for MS-DOS. In general, a non-procedural language (also called a declarative language) requires the programmer to specify what the program should do, rather than (as with a ...

  4. Literariness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Literariness

    Literariness. In literary theory, literariness is the organisation of language which through special linguistic and formal properties distinguishes literary texts from non-literary texts (Baldick 2008). The defining features of a literary work do not reside in extraliterary conditions such as history or sociocultural phenomena under which a ...

  5. Conceptual writing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conceptual_writing

    Conceptual writing (often used interchangeably with conceptual poetry) is a style of writing which relies on processes and experiments. This can include texts which may be reduced to a set of procedures, a generative instruction or constraint, or a "concept" which precedes and is considered more important than the resulting text (s). As a ...

  6. Literal and figurative language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Literal_and_figurative_language

    Literal language is the usage of words exactly according to their direct, straightforward, or conventionally accepted meanings: their denotation. Figurative (or non-literal) language is the usage of words in a way that deviates from their conventionally accepted definitions in order to convey a more complex meaning or a heightened effect. [1]

  7. Rhetorical modes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhetorical_modes

    Works. Subfields. Related. v. t. e. The rhetorical modes (also known as modes of discourse) are a broad traditional classification of the major kinds of formal and academic writing (including speech-writing) by their rhetorical (persuasive) purpose: narration, description, exposition, and argumentation. First attempted [clarification needed] by ...

  8. Literary language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Literary_language

    Literary language. Literary language is the form (register) of a language used when writing in a formal, academic, or particularly polite tone; when speaking or writing in such a tone, it can also be known as formal language. It may be the standardized variety of a language.

  9. Deconstruction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deconstruction

    Richard Rorty was a prominent interpreter of Derrida's philosophy. His definition of deconstruction is that, "the term 'deconstruction' refers in the first instance to the way in which the 'accidental' features of a text can be seen as betraying, subverting, its purportedly 'essential' message."