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Wednesday, February 20, 2019

Flow, Length, and Content of a Typical Body-paragraph



For a break-down as to the flow, length, and content of a typical body-paragraph, see the explanation below:


  1. Topic Sentence:
    • 1 SENTENCE (only)
    • YOUpresented your argument sub-point (in the topic sentence of the body-paragraph), 
  2. Developing Content:
    • 1+ SENTENCES
    • YOUfully developed the topic sub-point,
  3. Describing C/E Relationships:
    • 1+ SENTENCES
    • YOUdescribed the issue through cause/effect relationships, 
  4. Supporting Sentence:
    • 1 SENTENCE (with integrated source)
    • OUTSIDEsupported the argument sub-point through at least one scholarly source, 
  5. Explanation of Source:
    • 1+ SENTENCES
    • YOUexplained the significance of the scholarly source's declaration, and then 
  6. Closing Sentence:
    • 1+ SENTENCES
    • YOUwrapped up the body-paragraph in a final, summative sentence for the paragraph that directly relates back to the topic sentence of that body-paragraph.


This represents 1 body-paragraph that is explaining 1 sub-point from your THESIS.  You will need at least 3 more like this, as well as a counter-argument body-paragraph.  Also, remember that YOU are leading the argument, not your sources.  You must FIRST develop, explain, and argue the viewpoint clearly, and only AFTERWARDS will source material be used to DEFEND what you have already asserted.  This establishes YOU as the writer, and the sources are only there to lend credibility to what YOU have argued.

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