Finding Supporting Details
Each controlling sentence in a text is supported with different types of details. Note how the following focus statement is supported by different details.
Focus statement: Most people don’t give much thought to umbrellas, but these marvels of engineering have an interesting history.
|
Supporting Details |
Example |
|
Facts are ideas that can be proven true or false. |
The first collapsible umbrella belonged to Wang Mang in China in 21 C.E. |
|
Statistics are ideas expressed in numbers. |
According to the Guinness Book of World Records, the world’s largest umbrella is 56 feet wide and weighs 4,850 pounds. |
|
Definitions tell what a word means. |
The word umbrella comes from the Latin word umbra, meaning “shadow.” The word parasol comes from the Italian word para for “protecting against” and the word sole for “sun.” |
|
Examples show how an idea works in specific situations. |
Life guards, picnickers, and even the Pope use parasols to block the sun. |
|
Descriptions tell what something looks, feels, smells, tastes, or sounds like. |
Ancient Egyptians made umbrellas from palm fronds or giant feathers attached to central posts. |
|
Anecdotes tell little stories to make a big point. |
Umbrellas fell out of fashion when the umbrella-toting Neville Chamberlain became infamous for giving in to Hitler. |
|
Quotations give the exact words of someone. |
The politician Al Smith once noted, “The American people never carry an umbrella. They prepare to walk in eternal sunshine.” |