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Sentence Logic Videos 30 videos
Writing: Revision Drill, Problem 1. Which of the following would be the best opening sentence for this essay?
CAHSEE Writing: Revision Drill, Problem 2. Where would be the best place to put the following sentence?
CAHSEE Writing: Revision Drill, Problem 3. Which of the following would improve the essay as a whole?
Writing a Good Transition Sentence 5391 Views
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Description:
Transitioning smoothly from one sentence to the next can be tough. With a little bit of our help, your teacher will be calling you Mr. or Ms. Suave in no time.
Transcript
- 00:08
How to Write a Good Transition Sentence a la Shmoop.
- 00:12
You can’t go from the highway to… anywhere else… without an exit ramp.
- 00:17
You can’t get from one classroom to another without going down a hallway.
- 00:20
And you can’t go from one point to another in an essay without a transition.
- 00:26
So how do you write good transition sentences?
Full Transcript
- 00:30
Transition sentences exist to guide your reader from one idea to the next.
- 00:35
You don’t want to jump from talking about Violet Beauregard to talking about serial
- 00:39
killers without some sort of tradition.
- 00:42
Unless your reader really hates Willy Wonka, or blueberries, they are not going to follow
- 00:46
that logic.
- 00:48
If an essay represents your train of thought, each of the paragraphs are different cars
- 00:52
on this train.
- 00:53
They need to be hooked together by a strong transition, or one of them is going to jump
- 00:57
the tracks.
- 00:58
And if that’s the dining car, it’s going to make a huge mess.
- 01:02
Think of the feedback you’ve received from your teacher and peers.
- 01:05
If they’ve called your work choppy or disjointed or hard to follow, you might just need a few
- 01:10
good transitions to get your essays back on track.
- 01:14
The first thing to try is to simply use transition words such as next and however to link your
- 01:18
paragraphs together.
- 01:25
Your transition sentence can come at the end of a paragraph, or at the beginning of the
- 01:29
next one.
- 01:30
Experiment with both and see where it feels right.
- 01:33
If your ideas are similar, you can link them together with phrases like “also,” “likewise,”
- 01:39
or “in the same way.”
- 01:51
In much the same way… but a little different… sometimes you need to contrast things.
- 01:56
When contrasting, you can use linking words and phrases like but, yet, nevertheless, and
- 02:02
however.
- 02:03
However… hey, look what we just did… if you’re listing things, like detailed characteristics
- 02:08
of the different cars in a descriptive essay about trains, transitions come in handy, too.
- 02:13
Here are a few good transitions to use when providing additional support to your thesis:
- 02:19
additionally, also, in addition, and furthermore.
- 02:23
Furthermore, there are times when you need to emphasize a point. Perhaps right before
- 02:28
you go into your kick-butt closing paragraph.
- 02:30
Good, emphatic transitions include indeed, in fact, truly, and, of course, of course.
- 02:38
Of course… whoa, did it again… there is no set way to transition between paragraphs.
- 02:45
Sometimes all you need is a next or a however.
- 02:47
Sometimes you can compare with words like also and likewise.
- 02:51
Or contrast with words like but and nevertheless.
- 02:55
Or emphasize your point with indeed, in fact, and of course.
- 03:02
Finally…
- 03:07
…that’s a good transition word, too…
- 03:14
…never underestimate the power of a well-placed and.
- 03:18
Sometimes the small words are the best…
- 03:20
…especially when you’re trying to stop a runaway train.
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