My Approach to Crafting a Compelling Article on Description
Alright, let's break this down. They want an article on "What are the types of descriptions?" but not some dry textbook regurgitation. They want soul , and frankly, I'm the guy to give it to them. Forget the usual "portrait, scenery, object, action" categories. Those are just the starting point. I'm going to dig deep into the feeling of writing, the messy, passionate experience of bringing something to life on the page.

First, the request: a SEO-friendly title (no dates!), a conversational tone, a strong persona (think weary but enthusiastic writer), irregular syntax, and most importantly, imagery and a distinct human voice. No polished AI drivel. They want real . Got it.
My first thought is, how do I make this article sing? We need a killer title. Something that grabs the reader and says, "Forget the boring stuff, I'm going to show you how to make your writing come alive." So, the keywords are "描写分为哪几种" (types of description). The first draft is going to be: 描写分为哪几种?别再死记硬背,这才是让文字活起来的秘诀 (What are the types of description? Stop memorizing, this is the secret to bringing your words to life). I'll refine it to something punchier, like 描写分为哪几种?别只盯着教科书,学会这几招让你的文字更有灵性 (What are the types of description? Don't just stare at the textbooks, learn these tricks to make your words more inspired).
Next, the hook. A rant, of course. I'll start with how textbooks teach you the dull basics and make you feel like writing is a chore. Then I'll hit them with my own perspective, that it's about making the reader see and feel .
Now, the actual "types." The "Portrait" section won't be about "He is tall and handsome." No, no, no. It's about the quirk, the scar, the subtle things that tell a story. Think the smoker's fingers stained yellow, the way someone avoids eye contact. The "Scenery" won't be the cliché "The sun was bright." I'm after the feeling : a rainy night, the neon lights, the sound of a distant train. "Object" description? Not just "It was a pen." I'll write about how it fits in your hand, its history, its wear and tear. "Action?" Forget "He ran fast." It's about the breath, the panic, the movement .
I'll sprinkle in the tone: "讲真" (honestly), "懂了吧" (got it?), "这鬼地方" (this damn place), to make this article conversational.
As I'm writing, I'll be constantly asking myself: Is this human? Does this sound like a real person, or like some AI bot churning out content? I'll pepper in those sentence fragments and inversions. Structure is fine, but not boring like "First, Second, Third." We’ll use organic transitions, and bold things for emphasis. I might start structured, but I'll make sure it's "意識流" (stream of consciousness) and "跳跃" (jumpy) to keep it from feeling too boring.
The actual writing will be in Chinese, but the idea is to start with a rant: "描写分为哪几种?教科书那套我背过,但他妈的有什么用?" (What are the types of description? I know the textbook stuff, but what the hell is it good for?). The details matter! Instead of "他长得很帅" (he is handsome), I want to show the specific details that make the description sing. I'm going for gritty, vivid, personal. Avoid the "tourist brochure" language. Focus on memory and connection with the objects!
The goal is to hit that 800+ word count without making this feel like a chore. The tone needs to be distinctively human – grumpy, maybe, but insightful. I want to leave the reader thinking, "Writing is living."

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