Supporting sentences are called "supporting" because they "support," or explain, the idea expressed in the topic sentence. Of course, paragraphs in English often have more than two supporting ideas.
The purpose of a sentence is to express a complete thought. To be a complete thought, a sentence must contain a subject and a verb. (A verb is an action word, aka predicate.)
Topic sentence and controlling idea
A writing prompt is often just a sentence or two.
a thesis statement
how do i start focused topic sentence on styles of dress
When two complete sentences are in one complete paragraph; does that mean each sentence is a SEPARATE topic? Or is each separate sentence part of the SAME topic?
1)Topic sentence 2)Restate the text 3)Restate the question 4)Give two reasons to support 5)Concluding sentence
Sentences? A paragraph is made up of sentences. It begins with a topic sentence, continues with supporting sentences, and ends with a concluding sentence. * New person * And I would like to cal a "hook" is a sentence to lead the reader into reading the paragraph.
Enough. An abstract of a scientific journal paper is usually one paragraph. It may, rarely, be technically two (or even three) paragraphs, but the additional "paragraphs" are usually limited to a single sentence each.
THINK. How many different topics are you writing? One topic, one paragraph, one page is a letter. Six topics, six paragraphs, one page or two - makes a letter.
Yes in a paragraph you have one main topic and have at least 3 supporting/relating statements to that topic Yes in a paragraph you have one main topic and have at least 3 supporting/relating statements to that topic