First To start off To begin with For instance In addition to Next Also However Although Nonetheless While Imagine Picture this Lastly To Sum this up To conclude this To end my response Plus Not to mention As a result Even though Possibly Don't forget You should consider
To connect two sentences, we use
subordinate conjunctions like
because, since, if ... then
and coordinate conjunctions like
so, for
Be careful with adverbs that serve as transitions like therefore, as a result, consequently, since they are not to be used to connect two sentences in the way subordinate and coordinate conjunctions are used.
Prepositional phrases also serve the purpose of transition.
because of, due to, as a result of
Verbs, too, help us in this way.
lead to, cause, result from, result in
Cause and effect are an action and its results. The primary concept is that the effect comes about due to the specific activity (the cause) and not just happening afterward.
For example, a flood might damage a town, but the lower population of the town afterwards may not be entirely an effect of the flood, if the area was already losing residents for other reasons such as farm failures or business closings.
Some Common Transition Sets are listed below:
first - second - third
one - another - next
first of all - also
first - then
at first - after
one - equally important
the first - the second
one - another - last
first - in addition - finally
first - also - besides
one - the other
the first - a second
one example - another example
a good example - a better example
an important - an equally important
In an Accordion paragraph you will need a transition each
time you introduce a new reason/detail/fact.
Use the transition sets below when you write a paragraph.
Words in these sets may be mixed. Vary and bury them.
Read your paragraph aloud. This way you will know if you
have selected a transition that fits and makes sense.
Types of transitional words:
sequence - first, second, next, last
contrast - but, however, yet,
similarities - similarly,
results - as a result, consequently
get away from me weakling
consequently, because of, as a result of
as a result
A word used to show transition such as however, as a result, in conclusion, above, and but. There are many types of transitional words, including cause and effect and spatial order.
Both A andB
Expository writing is the art of explaining things that are hard to explain. So, if you wrote a paper about how to change your oil, that could be expository... or even just how to explain yourself. :) Cause and Effect papers are ones that usually focus on one cause and many effects, or several causes and one effect. Examples would be "why I decided to quit" or "How divorce impacts children."
The introduction. It should go at t transition the end of the introduction, so it will introduce your first body paragraph.
as a result
Therefore
as a result
The transition "therefore" is most appropriate to show a cause-and-effect relationship. It indicates that one event or action directly leads to another as a result.
As a result
circumstance
historical article
Causal chain essay must be connect to eachother. Cause > Effect > Cause > Effect and blah blah blah blah
Syntax is the rules governing grammar/language. I would say that the use of cause and effect in writing would be more just an element of writing.
A word used to show transition such as however, as a result, in conclusion, above, and but. There are many types of transitional words, including cause and effect and spatial order.
A word used to show transition such as however, as a result, in conclusion, above, and but. There are many types of transitional words, including cause and effect and spatial order.
It means that the cause must come before the effect. For example, the stoplight turns red (cause) before the car stops (effect), so the cause is written before the effect. Linear order.