The big idea: Tone, mood and voice all describe how a text feels — three close cousins that are easy to mix up. Here's how to tell them apart.
You already tell these apart every day — you just don't name them. You catch a friend's mood in a one-word text, feel a room's atmosphere the moment you walk in, and recognise a writer you like from their style.
Here's each one, with an example:
One clear example of each
Tone — the writer's attitude
‘Oh, brilliant. Another meeting.’ You can hear the eye-roll — that's a sarcastic tone.
Mood — the feeling in you
Warm candlelight vs a flickering bulb and a locked door — the feeling each one gives you is the mood.
Voice — the personality
You'd know a friend's texts before you saw the name — that ‘sound’ is their voice.
The key move: Say which one you mean — attitude (tone), feeling (mood) or personality (voice) — then show the choices that build it. Naming it precisely and proving it is where the marks are.
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Why it matters in the exam: In Paper 1 you earn marks by naming the tone precisely and quoting the words that create it — never a vague ‘the tone is interesting’. Mood and voice work the same way: say exactly what you mean, then prove it from the text.
Analyse the tone, mood and voice: “Congratulations. You've unlocked the premium experience of waiting on hold for fifty minutes to be told the office is now closed.”
Model answer plan
See the mark-by-mark plan — for / against / judgement, with marking guidance — in study mode.
Watch out: Don't muddle them. Tone = the writer's attitude; mood = the feeling in the reader; voice = the writer's overall personality. If in doubt, ask whose feeling you mean — the writer's or yours.