Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc., publishing as Longman Publishers Supporting Details Supporting details explain, develop, support, and illustrate.

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Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc., publishing as Longman Publishers Supporting Details Supporting details explain, develop, support, and illustrate the main idea. A major detail directly explains, develops, illustrates, or supports the main idea. A minor detail explains, develops, illustrates, or supports a major detail.

Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc., publishing as Longman Publishers Questions for Locating Supporting Details Turn the main idea into a question. –Who? –What? –When? –Where? –Why? –How?

Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc., publishing as Longman Publishers Find a major detail. Porpoises and dolphins are so similar in general appearance that many people mistake one for the other. However, they possess distinct differences. One difference is their shape. Porpoises are smaller and plumper than dolphins, which have long, streamlined bodies. In addition, the porpoise has a rounded head and a blunt snout in contrast to the dolphin’s beak-like nose. A second difference can be seen in their sizes. Porpoises rarely grow to be more than six feet in length or weigh more than 300 pounds. In contrast, dolphins can be four to twenty-six feet long and weigh from 70 to 1,500 pounds.

Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc., publishing as Longman Publishers Find a major detail. See the answer below. Porpoises and dolphins are so similar in general appearance that many people mistake one for the other. However, they possess distinct differences. One difference is their shape. Porpoises are smaller and plumper than dolphins, which have long, streamlined bodies. In addition, the porpoise has a rounded head and a blunt snout in contrast to the dolphin’s beak-like nose. A second difference can be seen in their sizes. Porpoises rarely grow to be more than six feet in length or weigh more than 300 pounds. In contrast, dolphins can be four to twenty-six feet long and weigh from 70 to 1,500 pounds.

Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc., publishing as Longman Publishers Find a minor detail. Porpoises and dolphins are so similar in general appearance that many people mistake one for the other. However, they possess distinct differences. One difference is their shape. Porpoises are smaller and plumper than dolphins, which have long, streamlined bodies. In addition, the porpoise has a rounded head and a blunt snout in contrast to the dolphin’s beak-like nose. A second difference can be seen in their sizes. Porpoises rarely grow to be more than six feet in length or weigh more than 300 pounds. In contrast, dolphins can be four to twenty-six feet long and weigh from 70 to 1,500 pounds.

Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc., publishing as Longman Publishers Find a minor detail. See the answer below. Porpoises and dolphins are so similar in general appearance that many people mistake one for the other. However, they possess distinct differences. One difference is their shape. Porpoises are smaller and plumper than dolphins, which have long, streamlined bodies. In addition, the porpoise has a rounded head and a blunt snout in contrast to the dolphin’s beak-like nose. A second difference can be seen in their sizes. Porpoises rarely grow to be more than six feet in length or weigh more than 300 pounds. In contrast, dolphins can be four to twenty-six feet long and weigh from 70 to 1,500 pounds.

Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc., publishing as Longman Publishers Creating a Summary from Annotations A summary is a brief, clear restatement of the most important points of a paragraph or passage. To create a summary after reading, you can annotate, or mark your text during reading.

Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc., publishing as Longman Publishers TEXTBOOKS Chapter-end questions Questions will help you remember important points, main ideas, and supporting details. STRATEGY: Annotate your text by circling the main idea and underlining major supporting details and examples while reading.

Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc., publishing as Longman Publishers Review Supporting details explain, develop, and support a main idea. To locate supporting details, a master reader turns the main idea into a question. A major detail directly explains, develops, illustrates, or supports the main idea. A minor detail explains, develops, or supports the major detail. In a passage, ideas usually flow from general to specific ideas. A summary is a brief, clear restatement of the most important points to a paragraph or passage.