A Quick Fix for strokes "A Quick Fix for strokes " is a popular scientific article written by Christine Gorman. Its subheading presented in a large print is aimed to grasp a reader's attention as it discloses the subject of the article and serve as a short summary for the text below. The theme ensures to appeal to the majority of adults as heart diseases are considered to be social scourge nowadays. Having risen her reader's attention Gorman precedes with an introduction which start is the sentence bearing the suspense . Inverse word-order postpones the accent to the end of the utterance. The significance of the broached problem is underlined with the usage of emotionally coloured words belonging to the semantic field of danger: catastrophe, suffer, terrify. Gorman also resorts to the most powerful verb in the synonymic paradigm ( to befall -happen, occur, fall out) to intensify the magnitude of the illness that may be fatal. She addresses directly to every reader applying the personal pronoun "you" that serves to generalization of the problem( as it may occur to everyone) and to gaining the reader's confidence.
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