Question

Identify recount conventions in the text below
- Underline or highlight the features listed below the text.
- Write examples of each in the box below.
The Day Everything Changed
I still remember the way the sky looked that morning, soft streaks of orange and gold bleeding through the clouds like watercolour paint. It was the kind of sunrise that made you stop and breathe it in. I didn’t know it yet, but that day would become one of the most unforgettable moments of my life.
It was the day of the regional speech finals. My stomach was a twisted knot of nerves as I stood behind the stage curtain, clutching my cue cards so tightly that the corners crumpled in my sweaty hands. I could hear the audience murmuring, the occasional cough, a burst of laughter and it made my heart race like a wild drum. Every fear I’d ever had about public speaking crashed down on me all at once: What if I froze? What if they laughed for the wrong reasons? What if I failed?
But then I remembered why I was there. I closed my eyes and pictured my grandfather, the one who first told me stories that sparked my love for words. I could almost hear his voice in my ear: "Just speak from your heart, and they'll listen."
When I walked onto that stage, something shifted. The lights blinded me, but the words came. Not perfectly, not without stumbles, but they came with truth and passion. I poured every ounce of feeling into that speech, and when I finished, there was a moment of silence that felt like forever, until the applause started.
I didn’t win that day. But I walked off that stage taller than when I walked on, proud, teary-eyed, and changed.
Text conventions
Past tense :

Emotive language :

Imagery :

First person :

Answers

Answered by GPT-4o mini
Here is the identification of recount conventions in the text along with examples for each:

### Text:
**The Day Everything Changed**
I still remember the way the sky looked that morning, soft streaks of orange and gold bleeding through the clouds like watercolour paint. It was the kind of sunrise that made you stop and breathe it in. I didn’t know it yet, but that day would become one of the most unforgettable moments of my life.
It was the day of the regional speech finals. My stomach was a twisted knot of nerves as I stood behind the stage curtain, clutching my cue cards so tightly that the corners crumpled in my sweaty hands. I could hear the audience murmuring, the occasional cough, a burst of laughter and it made my heart race like a wild drum. Every fear I’d ever had about public speaking crashed down on me all at once: What if I froze? What if they laughed for the wrong reasons? What if I failed?
But then I remembered why I was there. I closed my eyes and pictured my grandfather, the one who first told me stories that sparked my love for words. I could almost hear his voice in my ear: "Just speak from your heart, and they'll listen."
When I walked onto that stage, something shifted. The lights blinded me, but the words came. Not perfectly, not without stumbles, but they came with truth and passion. I poured every ounce of feeling into that speech, and when I finished, there was a moment of silence that felt like forever, until the applause started.
I didn’t win that day. But I walked off that stage taller than when I walked on, proud, teary-eyed, and changed.

### Text Conventions

**Past tense:**
- Example: "I still remember the way the sky looked that morning," ("looked" is in the past tense).

**Emotive language:**
- Example: "My stomach was a twisted knot of nerves," (this phrase evokes a strong emotional response).

**Imagery:**
- Example: "soft streaks of orange and gold bleeding through the clouds like watercolour paint," (it creates a visual picture in the reader's mind).

**First person:**
- Example: "I walked off that stage taller than when I walked on," (the use of "I" indicates a first-person perspective).
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