Kamis, 03 Desember 2015

A paragraph

Paragraphs
Adapted from The Little, Brown Handbook, 11th Edition, Contributors Dayne Sherman, Jayetta Slawson, Natasha Whitton, and Jeff Wiemelt, 2010, 72-111. Prepared by the Southeastern Writing Center. Last updated July, 2011.

A paragraph is a group of related sentences serving three important purposes:
  •  Paragraphs join together sentences into a unit that works to support an essay’s main idea or thesis.
  •  Paragraphs provide breaks that allow readers to pause and make sense of what they are reading.
  •  Paragraphs indicate the movement or development of ideas in an essay. 

Each new paragraph–or in some cases, clusters of paragraphs–contributes important new information that moves a reader one step closer to an essay’s main idea or thesis.

When to paragraph:
  • To signal a shift in focus.
  • To signal a shift in time or place.
  • To signal the next step in a sequence of steps.
  • To add particular emphasis to important ideas.
  • To set off a new person’s contribution to an unfolding dialogue.
  • To set off introductory and concluding material from the body of an essay.


Paragraph Unity and Continuity
Just as paragraphs work together to develop a thesis, the sentences within an effective paragraph support and extend one another to develop a single idea. Thus, you can think of a paragraph as a kind of “mini-essay.” Like a full essay, an effective paragraph:
  • presents a clear main or controlling idea
  • supports or develops that main idea
  • arranges ideas and supporting material in an orderly pattern, and
  • uses logical associations and transitions to link one idea to the next


Paragraph Unity
As a rule, every effective paragraph has an explicit topic sentence, which is stated at or near the beginning and to which all other sentences in the paragraph are logically related. We refer to that logical relationship as paragraph unity. To test for paragraph unity, ask yourself how each sentence of a paragraph helps support or develop the topic sentence of that paragraph. Give a name to the relationship between the two sentences (e.g., exemplification, classification, definition).

Paragraph Continuity
Continuity, or the linkage between sentences in a paragraph or between paragraphs, requires that you write each new sentence or paragraph with the adjacent sentences and paragraphs in mind. You want your reader to feel that one sentence or paragraph has grown naturally out of its predecessor and leads naturally to what follows–an effect that is typically achieved by picking some word or idea from one sentence or paragraph (what you might think of as “given” information) and taking it further in the next (the “new” information you’re offering).

Some Patterns of Paragraph Development:
  • Narrative paragraphs tell a story and are often arranged chronologically (i.e., according to time).
  • Descriptive paragraphs give details about the way something is sensed or experienced. The arrangement of those details typically reflects the logical order in which an object is sensed or experienced (i.e., from top to bottom or front to back; from sight to sound; from smell to taste).E
  • Exemplifying paragraphs use specific examples to illustrate and elaborate a more general claim.
  • Process paragraphs describe how something works or unfolds as a sequence of steps (e.g., in a recipe).
  • Cause and effect paragraphs examine why events occur and their consequences.
  • Comparison and contrast paragraphs examine the similarities and differences between things and events. These similarities and differences can be organized on an alternating point-by-point basis(e.g., X1 vs. Y1; X2 vs. Y2; X3 vs. Y3), or they can be handled independently one set at a time (X1, X2, X3 vs. Y1, Y2, Y3).
  • Classification and division paragraphs group separate objects into categories according to common qualities or separate objects and groups of objects into their component parts according to their differences.
  • Definition paragraphs include the term being defined, the class or category of things to which it belongs, and the details that distinguish it from other members of its class.
Related How to Write an  Paragraph click here

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