Difference between revisions of "Narrated Fact vs Opinion"

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:Any natural language such as English may serve a variety of purposes. To see that variety, you are welcome to compare [[imperative phrase]]s such as <code>Please compare!</code> and [[subjunctive phrase]]s such as <code>I wish you compared!</code>
 
:Any natural language such as English may serve a variety of purposes. To see that variety, you are welcome to compare [[imperative phrase]]s such as <code>Please compare!</code> and [[subjunctive phrase]]s such as <code>I wish you compared!</code>
  
:By their definition, [[report]]s are descriptions. In English, [[descriptive phrase]]s tell about events, state of affairs, or anything else that is worthy of reporting. These ''phrases'' may include [[factual statement|factual]], [[normative statement|normative]], and [[opinion statement]]s and each of those types of statements serves its specific objective.
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:By their definition, [[report]]s are descriptions. In English, [[descriptive phrase]]s tell about events, state of affairs, or anything else that is worthy of reporting. These ''phrases'' may include [[factual statement|factual]], [[normative statement|normative]], and [[opinion statement]]s and each of those types of statements shall accomplish its specific objective.
  
 
===Key terms===
 
===Key terms===

Revision as of 18:43, 12 November 2020

Narrated Fact vs Opinion (hereinafter, the Lectio) is the lesson part of Technical Report Essentials lesson that introduces its participants to technical report concepts. This lesson belongs to the CNMCT Entrance section of the CNM Cyber Placement.


Content

The predecessor lectio is What Reporting Is.

Script

Any natural language such as English may serve a variety of purposes. To see that variety, you are welcome to compare imperative phrases such as Please compare! and subjunctive phrases such as I wish you compared!
By their definition, reports are descriptions. In English, descriptive phrases tell about events, state of affairs, or anything else that is worthy of reporting. These phrases may include factual, normative, and opinion statements and each of those types of statements shall accomplish its specific objective.

Key terms

Testing

Closing

The successor lectio is What Tech Report Is.

Presentations

Slideshow

Video