Welcome to Module 3. Writing is not only about composing academic essays; it is a critical tool for managing your daily life and communicating with peers. Today, we focus on highly practical, functional texts.
We will master the structure of an informal email to a friend and learn how to write a sequence-based recipe using imperative command verbs.
1. The Informal Email Framework
An informal email is sent to friends, family, or close colleagues. It utilizes a relaxed tone but must still follow a structured architectural layout: Subject, Greeting, Opening, Body, and Sign-off.
Subject: Coffee this weekend?
How are you? I hope you are doing well. (Opening)
I am writing to see if you are free this Saturday. I found a great new cafe near the river. We can grab a coffee and catch up. Let me know if you have time! (Body / Main Message)
Best wishes, (Sign-off)
Sopheak
2. Writing a Simple Recipe
When writing instructions or a recipe, we use Sequencing Words to establish chronological order, and Imperative Verbs to give direct commands.
Always place a comma after your sequencing word before issuing the command.
An imperative verb begins the sentence. You do not use a subject pronoun (I, You, He).
A frequent constraint occurs when students mix standard email writing (S-V-O) with recipe writing (Imperative). In an email telling a story, you must include the subject. In a recipe giving an instruction, you must remove the subject.