Monday, August 10, 2020

Introductions & Conclusions

Introductions & Conclusions it’s time consuming, but any other estimate is bound not to be accurate since it’s so dependent on your handwriting. Why is everything word count these days instead of page count? You can also see how others are doing points-wise if you're at all competitive that way. How I see it, points can motivate early on, and eventually the joy of writing will kick in and you'll be writing without any external motivation at all. It’s a way to motivate them to get the book done. It works well for me, but I know others who don’t do well with it. I think it depends a lot on your personality, but forcing myself to be consistent day in and day out helps me get my books done. Each paragraph can represent one point but, there should be a flow between those paragraphs. The introductory paragraph must introduce the idea which will be discussed in the essay. 3 paragraphs out of 5, should be of the main body. This part contains your main ideas and supporting evidence or facts. When I was in school when I was younger, all assignments were page count. Many authors use word count as a motivational tool. To help them from getting stuck and editing each sentence over and over again as they write, they choose a minimum number of words they want to write each day. These words may not be perfect and will likely need to be heavily edited, but it gets the ideas down and keeps them from getting stuck on one area of their book. If your information is from reliable sources, your chances of getting excellence will get high. Try to go for the websites that end with .edu or .gov. Such websites usually have unbiased information. For example, if you are writing on any journalism topic, then go for BBC or other well-known news websites. Always avoid the least reliable sources, such as blogs or random articles. Without a daily word count, I would never complete them. For assignments that require double spacing, it would take approximately 250 words to fill the page. Again, the type of font used can make the word count higher or lower, but it’s a good rule of thumb for those who are simply looking for a general estimation. This is the part of your paragraph where you explain to your reader why the evidence supports the point and why that point is relevant to your overall argument. Tell the reader how the information in the paragraph helps you answer the question and how it leads to your conclusion. Over time, I've found that it's also very helpful as a tool to get thoughts going that have become stuck, or to help get to the bottom of a rotten mood. This is not accurate for academic papers with 1″ margins. This would depend heavily on how big/small you write. it’s like different fonts take up different amount of space on a page, so does your specific handwriting. The best way to know your per page word count would be to look at past pages and count the number of words you write for each page. Well, I hope, that the above sections cleared it all. To make it more clear for you, here are a few examples which you can refer to understand more. These are short essay examples which you will easily understand. As a short essay is determined by its length, it should have maximum of 3 body paragraphs. Your analysis should attempt to persuade the reader that your conclusion is the correct one. You have a limit over the word count, therefore, using excessively long speech doesn’t make a sense in a short essay. Remove all lengthy verb phrases, adjectives etc. Keep your sentences short and should explain the meaning perfectly.

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