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ENGLISH-8-LESSON 1 - FACT AND OPINION Powerpoint

This document distinguishes between facts and opinions. Facts are statements that can be proven, often with evidence, numbers or dates. Opinions are statements that express personal beliefs and cannot be proven, and often contain clue words like "think", "feel", or "believe". To identify facts, one can check if a statement can be proven true; to identify opinions, one looks for language expressing personal views. Facts are used to support opinions, but opinions themselves are not provable statements.

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0% found this document useful (1 vote)
1K views

ENGLISH-8-LESSON 1 - FACT AND OPINION Powerpoint

This document distinguishes between facts and opinions. Facts are statements that can be proven, often with evidence, numbers or dates. Opinions are statements that express personal beliefs and cannot be proven, and often contain clue words like "think", "feel", or "believe". To identify facts, one can check if a statement can be proven true; to identify opinions, one looks for language expressing personal views. Facts are used to support opinions, but opinions themselves are not provable statements.

Uploaded by

Marife Guadalupe
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Distinguishing Between

FACT AND OPINION

What are the differences?


OPINIONS
 An opinion is a statement that cannot
be proved or checked
 It tells what someone thinks, feels, or
believes
 Clue words for opinion statements are:
 think, feel, believe, seem
 always, never, all, none, most, least,
best, greatest, worst
FACTS
 Facts are statements that can be checked or
proved
 We can check facts by conducting some sort
of experiment, observation, or by
verifying (checking) the fact with a source
document
 Facts often contain numbers, dates, or ages
 Facts might include specific information
about a person, place or thing
HINTS FOR DECIDING IF A
STATEMENT IS FACT OR OPINION

 To recognize a FACT:
 Read each answer choice and ask yourself:
 “Can this statement be proved?”
Example: Which of these is a fact?
A. We live in the best apartment in the city.
B. I believe that summer is the best season.
C. I think that spaghetti is a delicious meal.
D. The Poughkeepsie Journal is a newspaper.
HINTS FOR DECIDING IF A
STATEMENT IS A FACT OR
OPINION
 To recognize an OPINION:
 Read each answer choice and ask
yourself “Does this statement tell what
someone thinks, feels, or believes?”
 Look in the answer choice for clue
words that signal an opinion
OPINION EXAMPLES:
WHICH OF THE FOLLOWING IS NOT AN
OPINION STATEMENT?
 I think that Colorado is the best state in

which to live.
 Chocolate cake is the most delicious kind of

dessert.
 Nearly 65% of our teens are over-weight.

 Taylor Swift is the greatest singer ever!


When you’re writing….
 Remember:
 Facts are often used
to support opinions
 Good opinions are
based on facts, but
they are still opinions

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