mainly the topic sentence in the paragraph
Yes, you can have a paragraph about a village blacksmith. You might include in this paragraph a topic sentence that describes the variety of jobs that were accomplished by the village blacksmith. You could also explain how the blacksmith was responsible for making horse shoes, swords, and almost anything else that was created from metal at the time. You might also mention the tools in the blacksmith shop including the forge, tongs, knives, anvil, and files.
The closing paragraph should consist of a thumbnail sketch of the above, and nothing else.
yes because there is a rule for indenting and that rule states that you indent every paragraph or else its wrong
A supporting body of a paragraph provides evidence, examples, or explanations that develop the main idea or topic sentence. It reinforces the main point by offering details and information that help to clarify or strengthen the argument or point being made in the paragraph.
A paragraph can be as long as the writer wishes it to be. Most, however, will stay between 2-6 sentences. As long as whatever is in it correlates with everything else, there is no limit to the size of a paragraph.
helium and hydrogen is probably incorrect so you might want to go look somewhere else
Gosh. This really sounds like a homework assignment that you'd like someone else to do for you. Do a search on her name, and anything you hit will have enough material for you to develop a paragraph.
A paragraph begins and ends with the stating of a main point and its proof. You need to come up with your own paragraph and not try to copy someone else's work. help you to cheat on an assignment.
yes because there is a rule for indenting and that rule states that you indent every paragraph or else its wrong
I'm not sure what you mean by "quotes," but here are two possible answers. # You do not need to put your paragraph inside quotation marks unless it is not your paragraph. If you have copied a paragraph that someone else wrote, then you do put quotes around it, and also tell who wrote it. # If you would like to end your paragraph with a short quote by someone else, you certainly can do that. If you have found a quote that exactly sums up what you wanted to say, you can conclude by writing "X said, 'Y,'" or "As X said, 'Y'" - X would be the name of the author and Y would be whatever they said. As Heather Armstrong said, "Keep writing."
Else Schimmelfennig has written: 'Malawi'
Importent of learership