What Makes a Descriptive Essay Different?
In a narrative essay, you tell a story. In a descriptive essay, you paint a picture. The examiner should be able to close their eyes and see what you’re describing.
Most students fail at this because they tell instead of show.
Telling: “The market was busy and noisy.”
Showing: “Vendors bellowed prices over the din of haggling customers. The narrow aisles overflowed with pyramids of rambutans and durians, their sweet-sharp scent wrestling for dominance in the humid air.”
That’s the difference between a C and an A.
The 5 Senses Framework
Every paragraph in your descriptive essay should engage at least 2-3 senses:
Sight (Most Used — But Do It Better)
Don’t just say “beautiful.” Be specific about colours, shapes, light, and movement.
- Weak: “The beach was beautiful.”
- Strong: “The turquoise water stretched to the horizon, where it dissolved into a pale lilac sky. Waves curled and collapsed in lines of white foam, each one erasing the footprints left by the one before.”
Sound
- “The muezzin’s call to prayer echoed across the kampung, weaving between the coconut palms.”
- “Motorbikes sputtered past in a chorus of angry hornets.”
Smell
- “The air carried the warm sweetness of freshly baked roti canai and the sharp bite of sambal.”
- “A faint mustiness rose from the old books, mixed with the cedar scent of the shelves.”
Touch
- “The sand burned beneath my bare feet, forcing me into an awkward sprint towards the water.”
- “Humidity clung to my skin like a second shirt.”
Taste
- “The teh tarik was scalding and saccharine, exactly the way Pak Cik Ali always made it.”
Figurative Language That Scores Marks
Examiners specifically look for these techniques:
Simile (comparing with “like” or “as”)
- “The old man’s face was like a map of wrinkles, each line telling a different story.”
- “Rain fell as thick as a curtain, obscuring everything beyond arm’s reach.”
Metaphor (direct comparison)
- “The city was a furnace in July, baking everything under its concrete lid.”
- “Her voice was honey — slow, sweet, and impossible to resist.”
Personification (giving human qualities to objects)
- “The wind whispered secrets through the rubber trees.”
- “Time crawled through the afternoon, dragging each minute behind it.”
Aim for: 3-4 figurative language examples per essay. More than that feels forced.
Structure for Descriptive Essays
Opening: Set the Scene
Establish where and when. Use a wide-angle view first, then zoom in.
“From the hilltop, the fishing village looked like a toy set — tiny boats bobbing in the harbour, miniature houses trailing smoke from their kitchens. But as I walked closer, the details sharpened into something real and breathing.”
Body Paragraphs: Zoom In
Each paragraph focuses on one aspect:
- Paragraph 2: The physical environment (buildings, landscape)
- Paragraph 3: The people (what they look like, what they’re doing)
- Paragraph 4: The atmosphere (mood, sounds, smells)
Closing: Personal Reflection
End with how the place/person/event made you feel or what it means to you.
Common SPM Descriptive Topics
- Describe a place that is special to you — your grandmother’s house, a favourite spot
- Describe a busy scene — market, festival, school event
- Describe a person you admire — physical appearance + character + why they matter
- Describe a memorable journey — the experience, not just the destination
- Describe a scene after a natural disaster — contrast between before and after
Mistakes That Drop Your Grade
Mistake 1: Writing a Story Instead
A descriptive essay is not a narrative. There’s no plot, no conflict, no resolution. You’re capturing a moment, not telling a story.
Mistake 2: Only Using Sight
If every sentence is about what something looks like, your essay falls flat. Mix in sounds, smells, textures.
Mistake 3: Generic Adjectives
“Nice,” “beautiful,” “good” — these words tell the examiner nothing. Replace them with specific, vivid alternatives.
Mistake 4: No Organisation
Even descriptive essays need structure. Don’t jump randomly between aspects. Move logically — wide to narrow, outside to inside, or top to bottom.
Practice Exercise
Describe your school canteen during recess. Write 350 words using:
- At least 3 senses
- 2 similes
- 1 metaphor
- 1 personification
Time yourself: 45 minutes maximum. This is exactly the kind of practice that moves students from B to A.