Persuasive texts are texts that try to persuade the reader. They normally have:
a point of view
arguments and evidence to support that point of view.
A persuasive text such as an advertisement may use the following:
simple words and bright pictures
rhetorical questions, i.e. questions that are asked without expecting an answer (‘What are you waiting for?’ ‘Have you ever seen such a bargain?’)
exclamation marks and capital letters (‘EVERYTHING MUST GO!!’)
emotive language (‘abandoned, abused, unloved, these animals need your help’).
Allow about 10 minutes
Study the following three texts. How would you say each of them tries to persuade the reader?
Text 1

Text 2

This advert:
appeals to parents by using the ideas of children and safety together
refers to ‘our own children’
uses the word ‘smiles’ instead of ‘miles’ to add humour
plays on the idea that good parents would buy only safe toys for their children
suggests that only their toys will make children smile.
Text 3
To the Editor
Dear Sir/Madam
The number of cars dumped in the city is now beyond a joke. It is absolutely horrendous that no one is taking an interest in something which is causing such a danger to our children.
The situation needs to be tackled NOW, not tomorrow. If nothing is done quickly someone will be killed and our Town Councillors will have blood on their hands.
Yours not very faithfully
Anne Angry
This letter:
uses extreme and emotive language: ‘horrendous’, ‘killed’, ‘blood on their hands’
highlights the safety of children
plays on words at the end – ‘Yours not very faithfully’ rather than ‘Yours faithfully’ makes you read it twice
makes no attempt to be fair or quote opposite points of view.
In this section you have looked at:
how texts have different audiences and purposes
the different features of texts that instruct, describe or persuade.
OpenLearn - Everyday English 2
Except for third party materials and otherwise, this content is made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 Licence, full copyright detail can be found in the acknowledgements section. Please see full copyright statement for details.