2. Recount
• A recount is a piece of text that retells past
events, usually in the order in which they
happened.
• Listening to a recount is listening about
something that has happened in your life,
what you did at the weekend or exciting
things.
• The purpose of recount is to give a
description of what occured and when it
occured.
3. Types of recount
• Personal recount
This usually retells an event that the writer
was personally involved in.
• Biography recount
This usually retells accounts of a person’s
life.
• Factual recount
This records an incidents, e.g. a science
experiment, police report, etc.
4. Continue ….
• Imaginative recount
The writer writes an imaginary role and
giving details of events in the recount, e.g.
a day in the life of a pirate.
• Historical recount
This retells historical events in the past.
5. Generic structure of a recount
• Title
• Orientation
(who were involved in the story, when, and
where)
• Events
(tell what happened in a chronological order)
• Re-orientation
(the conclusion of the experience)
6. Pay attention on
• Tense used on recount text is past
tense.
• Pronouns
• Noun phrases
• Time connections
• Time conjunctions
• Capitalisation
• Punctuation
7. Pronouns
• The subjective pronouns (he, she, I, it, they,
you, we) are used for the subject of a clause.
• The objective pronouns (him, her, me, it,
them, you, us) are used for the object of a
verb or a preposition.
• The possessive before a noun (my, his, her,
our, their, its, your) is used to show
possession.
• The possessive after a noun (mine, his,
hers, theirs, yours, ours) is also used to
show possession.
8. Noun Phrases
• A noun phrase can consist of:
noun and noun (e.g. a hockey stick)
adjective and noun (e.g. a beautiful girl)
noun and adverbial phrases (e.g. a girl
from his hometown)
9. Time Connectives
• Time connectives can be used to show chronological
order. Here are some of the words:
– at first - meanwhile - then
– when - now -soon after
– afterwards - lastly - next
– at this time - after a while - before that
10. Time Conjunctions
• The use of conjunctions:
– You can use a conjunction to link
words, phrases, and clauses.
• Conjunctions help to show time, cause,
opposition, choice, addition and effect.