Writing with Stardust: The Ultimate Descriptive Guide for students, parents, teachers and writers (33 page)

BOOK: Writing with Stardust: The Ultimate Descriptive Guide for students, parents, teachers and writers
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1. He had a lantern jaw that was
square and firm
.

2. He had a craggy jaw that was
strong and hard
.

3. He had a marble jaw that was
rugged and masculine
.

4. He had a granite jaw that was
gritty and tough
.

5. He had an obsidian jaw that was
obdurate and unyielding
.

 

                                                      
SHOULDERS

Atlas shoulders

taurine shoulders

simian shoulders

Colossus shoulders

canyon ridge shoulders

 

a Titan’s shoulders

a wrestler’s shoulders

Samson shoulders

Corinthian shoulders

ox yoke shoulders

 

 

1. He had Atlas shoulders above a
six-pack
.

2. He had taurine shoulders above a
barrel chest
.

3. He had simian shoulders and an
Olympian’s chest
.

4. He had Corinthian shoulders and a
horizon flat stomach
.

5. He had ox yoke shoulders and a
washboard stomach
.

 

                                                        
STRENGTH

a gladiator’s biceps

a goliath’s body

a leviathan’s forearms

a Spartan’s muscles

a gym toned physique

 

a strongman’s shoulders

a Greek god’s body

Popeye forearms

Schwarzenegger muscles

a gym honed physique

 

 

1. He had a gladiator’s biceps and
iron muscles
.

2. He had a goliath’s body and
ironbound muscles
.

3. He had Popeye forearms and
ironclad muscles
.

4. He had a Spartan’s muscles and
cast iron muscles
.

5. He had a gym honed physique and muscles
wrought from iron
.

 

                                                   
MASCULINITY

dishy

brawny

manly

hunky

hale and hearty

 

dashing

burly

strapping

handsome

hewn from rock

 

 

1. He was dashing with
a
rascal’s smile
.

2. He was brawny with
a roguish smile
.

3. He was strapping with
a scamp’s smile
.

4. He was hunky with
a scallywag’s smile
.

5. He was hale and hearty with
a rapscallion’s smile
.

 

                                                     MOVEMENT

a cat like grace

a tiger like tread

an athletic grace

a lion-like power

a feline grace

 

a leopard like grace

sure-footed purpose

a balletic grace

a leonine poise

like a panther in slow-mo

 

 

1. He
moved
with a cat like grace.

2. He
walked
with sure-footed purpose.

3. He
eased about
the room with a balletic grace.

4. He
prowled
around with a lion-like power.

5. He
padded
through the room like a panther in slow-mo.

                                             

 

 

     
                   
USING FORMULAS   

The purpose of the grid system is not to reduce the English language to a system of learning by rote exercises. Its function is fourfold.

1. To capture the
essence
of each scene, person, season or feature of nature.

2. To enable students to see the
patterns of writing
which govern English.

3. To expose them to the greatest possible amount of words that can help them
express
themselves.

4. To reintroduce a
love of nature
to a world that is increasingly technocratic.

There are most definitely faults in the book. By reducing any overlap of words to the barest possible minimum, I shackled myself in some of the chapters. Notable exceptions include the words ‘sorcery’ and ‘sparkling’, which probably occurred four or five times throughout the book. That is because they have an extraordinary ability to transform a text. It must be borne in mind, however, that I was confined to writing purely descriptive passages and essays. This brings its own problems when you are trying to avoid the monotony of starting sentences with ‘It’, ‘The’ or ‘A’. I had to leave out some important factors because of the format of the book. I hope to clear those up now.

The inspiration behind the book was a question that had been burning inside me for a long time. Are people aware of the patterns of English? Do people know that lips can be described with the four ‘f’s’? Are they aware of the link between bells, armour, rivers and waterfalls? Do they know that fabrics can be applied to descriptions of mist, snow and darkness? I knew that the weaker the student put in front of me, the more beneficial it was for them to be able to put a structure to their work. Higher ability students also found patterns helpful when they were analysing poetry, Shakespeare and trying to compare three texts as a unit. I always showed them why and how a writer wrote what he did, not just dissecting what he wrote.

On a different note, the last century has seen three quantum technological leaps. Those were: the car, the airplane and the television/mobile phone/computer. This century shall see
nine
. The world is not an easy place for the modern student. Anything we can do as educators to help them understand and analyse the challenges ahead is a gift to them. Patterns of thought fall into this category. In a faster world, sometimes it’s better to take a deep breath, slow down and try to figure out the reason behind things rather than rush headlong into the future. Then, and only then, can you say that you are thinking with stardust.

                               

 

                            
THE FORMULA FOR LIPS

 

       FABRIC                     FLOWERS                      FIRE                          FRUIT

satin soft

azalea soft

brazier-red

cherry sweet

silk soft

blossom soft

ember-red

cloudberry sweet

suede soft

dahlia soft

flame-red

melon sweet

velour soft

fuchsia soft

hellfire-red

peach sweet

velvet soft

petal soft

inferno-red

strawberry sweet

 

 

CLOUD, MIST, SNOW, LEAVES AND DARKNESS

cloud-adorned

cloud-blanketed

cloud-capped

cloud-clad

mist-cloaked

mist-draped

mist-festooned

mist-garlanded

mist-mantled

snow-sheathed

snow-shrouded

snow-snooded

snow-topped

darkness-veiled

darkness-wreathed

 

It sounds better to the ear to use some of these words in a metaphor. For example,
a veil of
darkness
might be more appropriate than darkness-veiled. Whichever way a student decides, it should add to the value of a story or essay to use these terms.

 

 

                                
DESCRIBING MALES

 

                                                       
BEARDS

 

LEVEL 1         LEVEL 2         LEVEL 3         LEVEL 4         LEVEL 5           OTHERS

a goatee

a spade shaped beard

an Abe Lincoln beard

a Captain Ahab

a Moses beard

 

a galway

a devil’s fork beard

a Vandyke beard

a Socratic beard

a Methuselah beard

 

 

1. He had a
shiny
goatee.

2. He had a
smooth
, spade shaped beard.

3. He wore a
glossy
, Abe Lincoln beard.

4. He boasted a
flowing
, Socratic beard.

5. He sported a
sartorial
, Methuselah beard.

 

                                                
MOUSTACHES

a bushy moustache

a pencil thin moustache

a toothbrush moustache

a handlebar moustache

a Zapata moustache

 

a bristly moustache

a military moustache

a smig

a walrus moustache

a D’Artegnan moustache

 

 

1. He had a
dark
, bristly moustache.

2. He had a
dapper
, military moustache.

3. He wore a
dandy
, toothbrush moustache.

4. He wore a
drooping
, walrus moustache.

5. He sported a
dashing
, D’Artegnan moustache, the emblem of a true musketeer.

 

                                                       STUBBLE

dark stubble

grainy stubble

sand-rough stubble

morning shadow

a rime of grey

 

peppered stubble

gritty stubble

designer stubble

five o’ clock shadow

salt and pepper stubble

 

 

1. He had
manly
, peppered stubble.

2. He had
manful
, gritty stubble.

3. He had
mannish
, designer stubble.

4. His face was grizzled with
manlike
, five o’ clock shadow.

5. His face was grafted with a
masculine
rime of grey.

 

                                                  
BLUE EYES

sea rover-blue eyes

nomad-blue eyes

voyager-blue eyes

seafarer-blue eyes

trailblazer-blue eyes

 

Rasputin-blue eyes

nautical-blue eyes

mariner-blue eyes

wayfarer-blue eyes

wanderlust-blue eyes

 

 

1. His Rasputin-blue eyes were
as clear as a calm lake
.

2. His nautical-blue eyes were
as clear as a summer brook
.

3. His voyager-blue eyes were
as clear as a fresh pond
.

4. His seafarer-blue eyes were
as clear as a spring stream
.

5. His trailblazer-blue eyes were
as clear as a mountain stream
.

 

                                
DIFFERENT EYE COLOURS

hypnotic, meltwater-blue eyes

scorching, smaragdine-green eyes

beguiling, turquoise-green eyes

enthralling, champagne-brown eyes

enchanting, clay-grey eyes

 

mesmerizing, empyrean-blue eyes

iridescent, malachite-green eyes

bewitching, tourmaline-green eyes

entrancing, molten-brown

enrapturing, loam-grey eyes

 

 

1. He had
lambent
, meltwater-blue eyes

2. He had
fulgent
, smaragdine-green eyes.

3. He had
bedazzling
, tourmaline-green eyes.

4. He had
effulgent
, molten-brown eyes.

5. He had
scintillating
, loam-grey eyes.

BOOK: Writing with Stardust: The Ultimate Descriptive Guide for students, parents, teachers and writers
9.24Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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