No, usually it is considered good practice to keep a paragraph limited to one topic and start a new paragraph when the topic changes. (There are, of course, exceptions, such as a paragraph that sets two different topics in relation, but several topics in a single paragraph is often a sign of sloppy writing and rarely a prerequisite for a good paragraph.)
paragraph completeness is about a words with complete thought and kindly appreciate the reader's
De La Salle thought there was a northwest passage but there was not
A paragraph.
A creative paragraph means you have to put a lot of thought and detail in every sentence.
Paragraphs are stylistic, so there is no one true answer. It's subjective. However, standard practice states that a paragraph contains a single thought and is generally more than one sentence. Paragraphs of dialog contain only one person's dialog and only one specific thought. When you are talking about more technical writing, like an essay or argumentative paper, a paragraph should start with a statement and the other sentences support that statement. This is a variation on the idea that a paragraph contains a single thought and is used because in most cases, it works. What a paragraph is NOT is a bag to hold a bunch of words. If you have more than one thought, break it into two paragraphs. If your thought is only one sentence, find another sentence or merge it with another, stronger thought. If you really are addressing only one thought, your paragraph can be as long as you like. Your reader may get fatigued by this, but it is a legitimate paragraph.
Paragraph is based on one thought or one idea. However, a composition made up of on the paragraphs.
People thought that the Northwest passage would be easier for trading and trading ships. It turns out that the Northwest passage does not exist
Lasalle thought that the Northwest Passage was the Ohio River. He eventually found out it wasn't.
in a paragraph or selection is the central idea or the most important thought.
In order for a paragraph to be cogent, it must support the topic sentence. If one is addressing another idea, conclude the previous thought and begin another paragraph.
You should not start a new paragraph when continuing the same thought or idea. Keep related information together within the same paragraph to maintain coherence and clarity in your writing.
People thought that the Northwest passage would be easier for trading and trading ships. It turns out that the Northwest passage does not exist