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what is the purpose of the text

The purpose of a text is the writer’s reason for writing it – what they want the reader to know , think, feel, or do after reading.

Main purposes of a text

Most texts are created with one or more of these core purposes:

  • To inform: give facts, explain ideas, or teach something (for example, news articles, textbooks, reports).
  • To persuade: convince the reader to accept a viewpoint or take an action (for example, advertisements, opinion pieces, campaign speeches).
  • To entertain: provide enjoyment, tell a story, or evoke emotion (for example, novels, poems, comics, many online stories).
  • To describe or explain: show how something looks, feels, or works in detail (for example, descriptive passages, “how it works” explanations).
  • To instruct: tell the reader how to do something step by step (for example, recipes, manuals, guides).

Often a text mixes several of these, but usually one main purpose stands out as primary.

How to spot the purpose

Readers usually work out the purpose by asking questions like:

  • What does the writer want me to do, think, or feel after reading?
  • Is the language full of facts and data (inform), emotional and opinionated (persuade), or imaginative and story‑like (entertain)?
  • What type of text is it – news report, ad, story, instruction guide? Different types tend to have typical purposes.

In short, the purpose of a text is its intended effect on the reader – the outcome the writer is aiming for when they chose what and how to write.