Want this question answered?
The sentence "The interstate connects major cities in the region" contains a supporting detail that answers the question of what the interstate connects.
This is not the kind of question we can answer.
No, a question does not count as a sentence. A sentence typically contains a subject and a verb and expresses a complete thought.
No, a supporting sentence supports the topic sentence.
Turn the topic sentence into a question.
develops, supports, or explains the main idea of a paragraph
Your question is a sentence and contains the phrase "feature article." (The above is another example of using the phrase in a sentence.)
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 topic sentence, the body with supporting sentences, and the clincher sentence
There are indeed three types of supporting details, namely, supporting sentences, detail sentences and concluding sentence. The supporting sentences is tied to the topic sentence; the detail sentences is related to supporting sentences, and concluding sentence re-emphasize the the topic sentence. In fact, there are four elements in a good paragraph - topic sentence, supporting sentences, detail sentences and concluding sentence. I hope that solves your problem.
Less is more I always lie THIS SENTENCE CONTAINS FIVE WORDS THIS SENTENCE CONTAINS EIGHT WORDS EXACTLY ONE SENTENCE OUT OF THESE THREE IS TRUE this statement is false The following sentence is true. The previous sentence is false. The the answer to this question no?
Evidence and statistics are most likely found in a supporting sentence.