A well organized paragraph should have one main idea. The other sentences should back up that one idea. If you have another idea it should be in a separate paragraph.
one central idea, and then 3 or 4 supporting facts.
The first paragraph (APEX)
The thesis statement typically belongs in the introduction paragraph of an essay, presenting the main idea or argument that the paper will discuss. It is not usually found in the concluding paragraph or the last body paragraph, which are more focused on summarizing the main points and offering concluding thoughts.
When looking for the main idea in a single paragraph, I would focus on identifying the central topic or theme that the paragraph is discussing. This can usually be found in the topic sentence or repeated throughout the paragraph. It is important to distinguish the main idea from supporting details or examples.
Written communication is an art of organized thoughts expressed in alpha-numeric or linguistic symbols or words printed in a legible surface, usually in paper.
The sentence is indented. (A few spaces over from the left) So, I'm just writing to show what it looks like. Usually a paragraph has a few sentences in it, at least, organized around the same idea. But when you want to make a new paragraph, you do it like that. The rest of the sentences in this paragraph will go all the way to the left, but not that first sentence. So this answer has three paragraphs in it.
A paragraph is a group of lines that typically develops one central idea. The sentences within a paragraph work together to express and explore that main idea.
A paragraph is usually about 4 to 5 sentences long.
An essay has a theme, supporting paragraph separated by transitions and a conclusion. In a topic paragraph, there is a main sentence (the topic sentence) which functiosn as the theme of the paragraph. There are usually several sentences that suport that topic sentence, just like in an essay, and a good topic paragraph will usually end with transition to the next topic paragraph. Some topic paragraphs may also have concluding statements.
The synthesis claim is usually found in the first part of the paragraph.
A stadium is a usually open-air tiered seating structure arranged in diverse configurations partly or completely surrounding a central space used for various organized human activities to entertain the masses. Organized outdoor spectator sports which are usually professional and to a lesser extent amateur take place in stadiums.
Usually by the dates.