Sweat running down my cheek, praying for a gust of wind to hit my face. The next point would break the tie. I could barely grip my tennis racket. The handle kept on slipping out of my hands. Oh, how I wished I had bought those gripping gloves, I thought. From the other side of the court I could tell that the teenage boy was eager to seek his revenge from the last time he was my opponent. BANG! My racket fell on the clay ground: I heard the snapping of the racket’s frame. As I bent down to retrieve it, my opponent’s ball came flying at me. It came so fast; I barely saw it explode right between my eyes. A bruise was already forming. I looked across the court and the teenager had also dropped his racket. His mouth was wide open. He saw me drop my racket and yet, he still hit one of his hardest strokes directly at me. After assuring him I was fine, I informed my not-so-nice opponent the match was not over.
Descriptive Paragraph
Brown hair with blond streaks. Short but at times spiky. Every time I see him, his eyes seem to change to dark ocean blue to light cloud blue. Young, about in his 30’s, isn’t afraid to tell others his age. True, proud Canadian, even though his background is Germane. Very athletic and tall from daily coaching. Spirant ankles are apart of his routine. Adjusting to them was hard at first but his mental attitude conquered. He’s confident about his hits but never cocky. He ranks about top 50 in the world for a tennis coach. He is my one and only tennis coach.
Expository Paragraph
Perfecting a serve is very default; all you need is some practice and great motivation. When you start to serve, you must be aware of where you are standing. Your serve always goes cross court, which means diagonally. The lines on the court are there to help you target where you want your ball to land. While in a serve pose, the motion should tie together and flow as one. At one point you should look like a leaning trophy. First, you prefect the motion of the serve. Second, you work on your impact of the ball to the racket. The ball should hit the racket’s face at 12 o’clock position. Finally, you end inside the court while rotating the shoulders. If you enjoy watching tennis, you could tell that the pros sometimes fault in their severs, which says a lot.
Persuasive Paragraph
Where would you prefer to play tennis, indoors or outdoors? Indoor tennis is, hands down the best location to play tennis, especially practicing it. When you play outdoors, you never know if mother natures on your side. It could start to rain or worse, start a thunder storm. If you train one way, and then you change how you practice, your hard work goes down the drain, unless you have motivated your self to get use to it. Would you pay more money for playing outdoors and barely have a proper match?
Tennis is my life
Narrative Paragraph
Sweat running down my cheek, praying for a gust of wind to hit my face. The next point would break the tie. I could barely grip my tennis racket. The handle kept on slipping out of my hands. Oh, how I wished I had bought those gripping gloves, I thought. From the other side of the court I could tell that the teenage boy was eager to seek his revenge from the last time he was my opponent. BANG! My racket fell on the clay ground: I heard the snapping of the racket’s frame. As I bent down to retrieve it, my opponent’s ball came flying at me. It came so fast; I barely saw it explode right between my eyes. A bruise was already forming. I looked across the court and the teenager had also dropped his racket. His mouth was wide open. He saw me drop my racket and yet, he still hit one of his hardest strokes directly at me. After assuring him I was fine, I informed my not-so-nice opponent the match was not over.
Descriptive Paragraph
Brown hair with blond streaks. Short but at times spiky. Every time I see him, his eyes seem to change to dark ocean blue to light cloud blue. Young, about in his 30’s, isn’t afraid to tell others his age. True, proud Canadian, even though his background is Germane. Very athletic and tall from daily coaching. Spirant ankles are apart of his routine. Adjusting to them was hard at first but his mental attitude conquered. He’s confident about his hits but never cocky. He ranks about top 50 in the world for a tennis coach. He is my one and only tennis coach.Expository Paragraph
Perfecting a serve is very default; all you need is some practice and great motivation. When you start to serve, you must be aware of where you are standing. Your serve always goes cross court, which means diagonally. The lines on the court are there to help you target where you want your ball to land. While in a serve pose, the motion should tie together and flow as one. At one point you should look like a leaning trophy. First, you prefect the motion of the serve. Second, you work on your impact of the ball to the racket. The ball should hit the racket’s face at 12 o’clock position. Finally, you end inside the court while rotating the shoulders. If you enjoy watching tennis, you could tell that the pros sometimes fault in their severs, which says a lot.
Persuasive Paragraph
Where would you prefer to play tennis, indoors or outdoors? Indoor tennis is, hands down the best location to play tennis, especially practicing it. When you play outdoors, you never know if mother natures on your side. It could start to rain or worse, start a thunder storm. If you train one way, and then you change how you practice, your hard work goes down the drain, unless you have motivated your self to get use to it. Would you pay more money for playing outdoors and barely have a proper match?