Mada za sehemu hiiCreate a variety of texts for different communicative purposes using the appropriate tone and registerMada 3
- Recognise the main stages of writing
- Create dialogues on daily life topics
- Create and express daily life situations in writing
A dialogue is a written conversation between two or more people. In a dialogue, each person takes turns speaking, and we show what each person says using quotation marks and the person's name or label.
A good dialogue has three important parts:
- Opening – The conversation begins with a greeting or introduction.
- Body – The main discussion happens here, with people asking and answering questions.
- Closing – The conversation ends with a goodbye or a final remark.
Every dialogue needs at least two speakers. Each speaker's words should be on a new line so the reader can easily follow who is speaking.
- Choose a daily life situation – Pick a place such as home, school, the market, a shop, or the street.
- Decide who is speaking – Choose two or more characters, such as a student and a teacher, a customer and a shopkeeper, or friends.
- Think about what they will talk about – Common daily topics include asking for help, buying something, making plans, or sharing information.
- Use natural speech – Make the language sound like real people talking. Use short sentences and common expressions.
- Add the correct punctuation – Put quotation marks around what each person says. Use a new line for each speaker.
Situation: A customer wants to buy mangoes at the market.
Dialogue:
Customer: Mambo! Mangoes ziko wapi? Vendor: Hapa, mpendwa. Zoza la moja ni shilingi 500. Customer: Ni ghali kidogo. Shilingi 400? Vendor: Hapana, bwana. Shilingi 450, halafu yote ni yako. Customer: Sawa, nacheza. Kilo moja, tafadhali. Vendor: Hapa ni kilo moja. Shilingi 450 tafadhali. Customer: Hapa ni shilingi 500. chapa yako. Vendor: Asante, mpendwa. Karibu tena!
Why this works: This dialogue has an opening (greeting), a body (negotiating the price), and a closing (paying and saying goodbye). The language sounds natural, like real market talk in Tanzania. Each speaker has their own line, and the quotation marks show exactly what each person says.
- Use simple words that your reader will understand.
- Make sure each person speaks in turn.
- Add expressions that people really use, such as "Mambo," "Sawa," or "Tafadhali."
- Keep the conversation short and focused on one topic.
- Read your dialogue aloud to check that it sounds natural.
Try creating a dialogue for one of these situations:
- Two friends talking about what to do after school
- A student asking a teacher for help with homework
- A customer buying exercise books at a shop
Remember to include a greeting at the beginning and a goodbye at the end!
In Tanzania, you will use dialogue writing skills when you need to write scripts for school performances, create role-play conversations for community dramas, or even when you write letters to request something from an office. For example, if you write a letter to your headteacher asking for permission to hold a sports day, you will structure your request like a dialogue between yourself and the headteacher in your mind—greeting, explaining your purpose, making your request, and closing politely.
Swali
Which tense is commonly used to talk about daily routines such as brushing teeth, having breakfast, and going to school?
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