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Published byAbraham Butler Modified over 9 years ago
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Paragraphs
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A group of related sentences set off by a beginning indention or sometimes, extra space Paragraphs give you and your readers a breather from long stretches of text and they indicate key steps in the development of your thesis.
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Unity “ An effective paragraph develops one central idea- in other words, it is unified.”
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Coherence: “When a paragraph is coherent, readers can see how it holds together : the sentences seem to flow logically and smoothly into one another.”
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Paragraph organization General to specific: “…a downshift from more general statements to more specific ones.” Climactic: “Sentences increase in drama or interest, ending in a climax.”
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Paragraph Organization: Spatial: “Sentences scan a person, place, or object from top to bottom, from side to side, or in some other way that approximates the way people actually look at things.” Chronological: “ Sentences present events as they occurred in time ; earlier to later.”
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Parallelism: Parallelism helps tie sentences together with the use of similar language structures. I came. I saw. I conquered.
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Repetition and Restatement: “Repeating or restating key words helps make a paragraph coherent and also reminds readers what the topic is.”
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Consistency: Be consistent in person and number with pronoun usage and verb tense.
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Transitional Expressions: Transitions forge specific connections between sentences and paragraphs. They form a bridge between what has been said and what is going to be said.
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Paragraph Development: Narration : retells a significant sequence of events, usually in the order of their occurrence ( that is, chronologically).” Storytelling.
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Description : Description details the sensory qualities of a person, scene, thing or feeling using concrete and specific words to convey a dominant mood, illustrate an idea or achieve some other purpose.”
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Illustration or support : Use of several specific examples Providing reasons for stating a general idea
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Definition: “ Defining a complicated, abstract or controversial term often requires extended explanation.”
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Division or Analysis: Separation of a subject into its elements to provide an analysis through examination of its parts.
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Classification: Sorting items or ideas into specific groups.
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Comparison and Contrast: Illustrating similarities and differences.
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Cause and Effect: Explanation for the reason something happened or for what did or may happen. What led to an event. The reason- the “Why?”
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Process Analysis: Analysis of how something is done or how something works.
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Source: Aaron, Jane E., The Little Brown Compact Handbook, New York: Pearson, 2010.
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