Anecdote: A short account of a particular incident or event, especially of an interesting or amusing nature. (دÙÚØ³Ù¾ ØÚ©Ø§Ûت)
Euphemism: These terms are used for talking about unpleasant or embarrassing subjects without mentioning the thing themselves.
(ÙØ§Ø®ÙØ´Ú¯ÙØ§Ø± بات Ú©Ù Ù
ÙØ§Ø¦Ù
Ù¾ÛØ±Ø§Ø¦Û Ù
ÛÚº Ø¨ÛØ§Ù Ú©Ø±ÙØ§Û ØØ³ÙÙ ØªØ¹Ø¨ÛØ±)
Thesis, a long piece of writing on a particular subject, especially one that is done for a higher college or university degree. (تØÙÛÙÛ Ù
ÙØ§ÙÛ)
Biography: An account of someone’s life written by someone else. (Ø³ÙØ§ÙØ ØÛات)
Autobiography: An account of one’s life written by oneself.
(Ø®ÙØ¯ ÙÙØ´Øª Ø³ÙØ§ÙØ ØÛات)
Feature: A newspaper article that deals with a subject at length.
(Ù
ضÙ
ÙÙ)
Essay: A short piece of writing on a particular subject.
(Ù
ختصر Ù
ضÙ
ÙÙ)
Book review: A book review is a form of literary criticism in which a book is analyzed based on content, style, and merit.
(ØªØ¨ØµØ±Û Ú©ØªØ¨)
Cliché: It is a 19th century borrowed word from the French which refers to a saying or expression that has been so overused that it has become boring and unoriginal.
(پٹا ÛÙØ§ ÙÙØ±Ø§ØÙØ±Ø³ÙØ¯Û Ø®ÛØ§Ù)
Jargon: Special words or expressions used by a profession or group that are difficult for others to understand.
(Ú©Ø³Û Ø®Ø§Øµ طبÙÛ Ù
ÛÚº سÙ
Ø¬Ú¾Û Ø¬Ø§ÙÛ ÙØ§ÙÛ Ø§ØµØ·ÙØ§Ø)
Caption: A title or brief explanation accompanying an illustration, cartoon, or poster.
(تصاÙÛØ± ÛØ§ ÚØ§Ø¦Ú¯Ø±Ø§Ù
Ú©Û ÙØ¶Ø§ØØªÛ ØªØØ±Ûر)
Title: A name given to a book, film, composition or artistic work. (عÙÙØ§Ù)
Editorial: An article where editor expresses his opinion. Its place is reserved in a newspaper.
(ادارÛÛÛ Ø§Ø®Ø¨Ø§Ø± Ú©Û Ù
Ø¯ÛØ± Ú©Û Ø°Ø§ØªÛ Ø®ÛØ§Ùات پر Ù
بÙÛ Ù
ضÙ
ÙÙ)
Elegy: A a poem or other piece of writing expressing sadness, usually about someone’s death. (Ù
رثÛÛ)
Embargo: An article prepared in advance which has to published only after a deadline.
(ØªØØ±Ûر Ú©Û Ø§Ø´Ø§Ø¹Øª Ú©Û ÙØ¦Û Ù
تعÛÙ Ø´Ø¯Û ØªØ§Ø±ÛØ®)
Pejorative: A pejorative word, phrase etc expresses criticism or a bad opinion of someone or something. (Ù¾Ú¾Ø¨ØªÛØÛØ¬ÙØÙ
ÙØ§Ù
ت)
Epic: A long poem, typically one derived from ancient oral tradition, narrating the deeds and adventures of heroic or legendary figures or the past history of a nation. (رزÙ
ÛÛ)
Ghostwriter: A person whose job it is to write material for someone else who is the named author. (ÙÙÙ
Û Ù
Ø²Ø¯ÙØ±)
Lead: The introductory paragraph of a news story.
(Ø§Ø®Ø¨Ø§Ø±Û Ù
ضاÙ
Û٠کا Ø§Ø¨ØªØ¯Ø§Ø¦Û Ù¾ÛØ§Ø±ÛگراÙ)
Lyric: Using words to express feelings in the way that a song would. (Ú¯ÛØª Ú©Û Ø¨ÙÙ)
Oxymoron: Two words used together that have, or seem to have, opposite meanings.
(اجتÙ
اع٠ضدÛÚº)
Pithy: A pithy statement or piece of writing is short and very effective. (پر Ù
غز Ú©ÙØ§Ù
)
Rhetoric: Written or spoken in a way that is impressive but is not honest.
(پر تکÙÙ Ø²Ø¨Ø§ÙØ Ù
Ø¨Ø§ÙØºÛ آرائÛ)
Slang: Words expressions that are very informal and are not considered suitable for more formal situations. Some slang is used only by a particular group of people.
(عاÙ
ÛØ§ÙÛ Ø¨ÙÙÛØØ¨Ø¯Ú©ÙØ§Ù
Û)
Pseudonym: a name that someone uses that is not the real name, especially for writing a book. (ØªØ®ÙØµ)
Buzzword: A word that has become very popular, especially a word relating to a particular activity or subject. (ÙÙÛ Ù
ØØ§ÙرÛ)
Catchword: A word used for representing a particular idea, usually one that is popular for a short time.
(Ø¹Ø§Ø±Ø¶Û Ø·ÙØ± پر Ù
Ø´ÛÙØ± ÙÙØ±Û)