Additionally, another way is sensory details. Sensory details are words that appeal to your senses. For instance, on page 281 it says, “Elinor’s hand flew to her mouth. The rooster’s head was hanging down, its red comb flopped over its staring eyes. Its plumage was still glossy, as if all the life in it had fled there, into the fine russet breast feathers, the darkly patterned wings, and the long deep-green tail feathers that shimmered like silk.” The author is using words that appeal to the sense sight. A few words on this page give us a better image in our head, like the word shimmered made me imagine feathers that looked as if it was twinkling. Finally, the last way is by explaining the scene and describing the feeling of the characters’. Page 39 uses many descriptive words, such as sky-blue, freshly sawn wood, narrow, wonderful, and so on. These words add more to my imagination of how Elinor’s library looks
Additionally, another way is sensory details. Sensory details are words that appeal to your senses. For instance, on page 281 it says, “Elinor’s hand flew to her mouth. The rooster’s head was hanging down, its red comb flopped over its staring eyes. Its plumage was still glossy, as if all the life in it had fled there, into the fine russet breast feathers, the darkly patterned wings, and the long deep-green tail feathers that shimmered like silk.” The author is using words that appeal to the sense sight. A few words on this page give us a better image in our head, like the word shimmered made me imagine feathers that looked as if it was twinkling. Finally, the last way is by explaining the scene and describing the feeling of the characters’. Page 39 uses many descriptive words, such as sky-blue, freshly sawn wood, narrow, wonderful, and so on. These words add more to my imagination of how Elinor’s library looks