Writing: B1 - Lesson 8: Describing Feelings and Emotions

Writing: Narrative & Descriptive Writing

B1 Lesson 8: Describing Feelings and Emotions

Listen to the examples here.

What you will learn: By the end of this lesson, you will be able to write more engaging descriptions of feelings by using stronger vocabulary and the "Show, Don't Tell" technique.

Before You Start 🧠

Key Vocabulary (Click 🔊)

Let's learn these two important ideas for this lesson.

Emotion
| អារម្មណ៍
A strong feeling, such as happiness, sadness, or anger.
Vivid
| រស់រវើក
Producing a strong, clear picture in your mind.

Step 1: "Level Up" Your Vocabulary

Using basic words like "happy," "sad," or "angry" is good for A2, but at B1, you need to be more precise. Using stronger, more vivid words makes your writing more interesting.

Instead of "Happy"...
happy
Thrilled
Instead of "Sad"...
sad
Miserable
Instead of "Angry"...
angry
Furious
Instead of "Nervous"...
nervous
Anxious
Instead of "Scared"...
scared
Terrified
Instead of "Tired"...
tired
Exhausted

Step 2: "Show, Don't Tell"

This is the most important rule in descriptive writing. Don't just *tell* the reader the emotion; *show* them the physical actions, thoughts, and feelings so they can guess the emotion themselves.

TELLING 😴 (Weak)

"I was nervous."

"He was happy."

"She was sad."

SHOWING ✨ (Strong)

"My hands were shaking and my heart was pounding."

"A huge smile spread across his face and he laughed out loud."

"She looked at the floor and tears began to roll down her cheeks."

Step 3: Give a Reason with "because"

Your writing is much stronger when you connect the feeling to the reason. The easiest way is with the word because.

The Structure: [Feeling/Action] + because + [Reason]

Combine "showing" with a reason.

My hands were shaking because I had to speak in front of 50 people.

He was smiling from ear to ear because he had just received a promotion.

Practice What You Learned 🎯

Quiz: Which Sentence is Better Writing?

Choose the sentence that is more vivid and uses the "Show, Don't Tell" technique.

1. Which sentence is better?

2. Which sentence is better?

3. Which sentence is better?

Key Vocabulary Reference (Click 🔊)

  • Thrilled (Adjective) | រំភើប, រីករាយ
    Extremely happy and excited. (Stronger than "happy")
  • Miserable (Adjective) | វេទនា, ទុក្ខព្រួយ
    Extremely sad or uncomfortable. (Stronger than "sad")
  • Furious (Adjective) | ខឹងខ្លាំង
    Extremely angry. (Stronger than "angry")
  • Anxious | ថប់បារម្ភ
    Feeling worried and nervous. (Stronger than "nervous")
  • Terrified | ភ័យខ្លាច​យ៉ាង​ខ្លាំង
    Extremely scared. (Stronger than "scared")
  • Exhausted | ហត់នឿយ
    Extremely tired. (Stronger than "tired")

Your Writing Mission ⭐

Write About a Feeling

Choose one of the situations below. Write a short paragraph (3-4 sentences) describing the feeling. Do not use the simple words (happy, sad, angry, nervous). Try to use the "Show, Don't Tell" technique and the "because" formula.

  • Situation 1: You won a prize or received a great gift.
  • Situation 2: You lost your phone or wallet.
  • Situation 3: You were late for a very important meeting or exam.

Example (Situation 3): "My heart was pounding in my chest because I was stuck in traffic. I looked at my watch every 10 seconds. My hands were sweating as I imagined my boss waiting for me."

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