Welcome to your descriptive writing framework. As you transition into the A2 elementary level, you must move beyond listing isolated facts. Your goal is to paint a clear, structured picture for your reader.
Today, we will master the mechanics of organizing chronological routines, mapping physical spaces within your city, and characterizing the people around you with absolute syntactic precision.
1. Sequencing Daily Routines
When writing about your daily habits, jumping randomly between morning and night confuses the reader. You must construct a logical timeline using Time Markers (Sequence Connectors) placed at the absolute beginning of your sentences.
Then, I drink a cup of coffee.
After that, I go to work.
Finally, I return home and relax.
Notice that every time marker is immediately followed by a comma before the main S-V-O engine begins.
2. Mapping Your Environment
To describe your town or city, you must establish the existence of an object using There is / There are, and then anchor its location using Prepositions of Place.
The primary school is across from the bank.
Use "near" for general closeness, "next to" for immediate borders, and "across from" when a street separates the two locations.
3. Characterizing People
When describing a person's appearance and personality, English forces a strict structural divide between the verbs "to be" (am/is/are) and "to have" (have/has).
He has dark brown hair and blue eyes.
Use "is" for adjectives describing general states (tall, short, friendly, smart). Use "has" for physical nouns that the person possesses (hair, eyes, a beard).
A highly prevalent error among ESL learners is translating their native language syntax for age directly into English. In many languages, you "possess" your years. In English grammar, age is a state of being. You do not have years; you are your age.