PictureFrame wrote: » NO. That'd really infuriate an examiner and it's a big waste of time swapping from pen to pen in my opinion! What i've always done to make my quotes stand out is use this method (and it makes the essay look extra long :P)We see Polonius' cynicism regarding young love and human relationships when he utilises animal imagery to describe how Hamlet: 'Walks with a larger tether' He also says how he will: 'loose his daughter' Maybe it's a bad idea but I always skip lines! Polonius babe, please be on the paper :P
YeaaahFaoiSin wrote: » No need. Waste of time :pac:
rkeano5 wrote: » My teacher advised strongly against that, particularly if it's in red.
skyscraperblue wrote: » I've never done this quotes-in-a-different-colour thing. To me it detracts from the flow of the essay, both for me writing it and for someone else reading it. But it's personal preference.
reznov wrote: » Unrecommended proceduree unless you're quoting paragraphs.
galwaymusic wrote: » Are you allowed to change the colour of pens for quotes? For example green or black?
finality wrote: » I have one for literary genre! omg soulmates
Incompetent wrote: » Has anyone looked at effects of globalisation in the geography exam skills books? It seems like it doesn't talk about the effects at all
Manic2 wrote: » I hateeeeeee writing in black pen! I'm left handed so it smudges all over the place and it ends up looking so so so messy! :P
Togepi wrote: » That's probably where I went wrong in Junior Cert History. :L Acronyms are epic! I have one for my whole general vision and viewpoint essay. ^_^
Togepi wrote: » Yeah it's fine. I'm just going to use black pen for numbering and answering in mine, not changing pen will save a few precious seconds! :P
finality wrote: » I actually learnt off one or two for JC history. :L I preferred acronyms though, I had one for the buildings in some type of monastery, "cacrids" and I still remember what it stood for... I love acronyms
Togepi wrote: » Does that mean you learned off essays for the Junior Cert? :eek:
Manic2 wrote: » But as I asked earlier, is purple pen ok for numbering etc?
Eathrin wrote: » Why bother changing colours? They don't mark your paper after glancing at it. Your essay will gain you marks, not "look at me I'm quoting!"
Diamondsandrose wrote: » Here for the Hamlet essay does anyone write quotes in a different colour to make them stand out? Only just thought of it there but I'm not sure if it'd be appropriate for an English exam?
reznov wrote: » Nah. Anything can come up for Hamlet. Know the play and its key scenes to ensure maximum marks. Have a variety of quotes prepared. Soliloquies are suited to most answers, perfect for reflecting Hamlet's ever dynamic state of mind.