Yes, Indeed
a strong concluding sentence is a sentence,like at the end of an outline summarizing everything you wrote!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! pretty simple huh
a strong concluding sentence is a sentence,like at the end of an outline summarizing everything you wrote!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! pretty simple huh
it is the last sentence to end a paragraph or a story A sentence that condenses your summation.
A concluding sentence wraps up your writing and leaves the reader with a final thought. If you left your writing without a concluding sentence, the writing would end abruptly. A concluding sentence gives the piece of writing a better flow, and makes it easier to read. If you are still in school, if you don't write a concluding sentence you will get points taken off your grade.
It is not necessary to have a concluding sentence at the end of every paragraph in an essay, but it can help to provide a smooth transition between ideas and reinforce the main point of the paragraph. Including a concluding sentence can improve coherence and provide closure to your arguments.
Can you use the word concluding in a sentence? Done.
the purpose of a concluding sentence is to end the paragraph, summary, conversation, etc.. You dont want to leave them hanging so you close it off.
u use a period and a concluding last sentence
Nobody can answer this but you. The concluding sentence must be what you have learned from the experiment. You'll have to write your own sentence based on what your data was.
A sentence to sum up the the topic.
A good concluding sentence is is there more faces that we will learn and the answer to that is yes
A Concluding Sentence is the last sentence of a paragraph(s), it summarizes everything that you just wrote about and it is somewhat like your Introduction Sentence. Usually, your concluding sentence will say something like "In conclusion," or "Therefore," or "To summarize." Basically, when writing a formal paper, you have three steps -- "Tell them what you're going to tell them" (the Introduction), "Tell them" (the Body), and "Tell them what you just told them" (the Conclusion).