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Hi, welcome again to www.engvid.com. I'm Adam. Today's lesson is about the paragraph. It's
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a writing lesson, and I want to show people what a paragraph is and how to construct one,
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what to do, what not to do so you can write very clear, very tight paragraphs. This is
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especially important for IELTS, TOEFL, SAT students but everybody has to follow
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the exact same rules. Now before I even begin, I must say that I'm
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talking mostly about academic writing or even business writing. Creative writing like novels
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or short stories, anything fiction, you can do anything you want. Only always remember:
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somebody has to read what you wrote so it has to be clear. But academic essays, for
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example, certain rules you have to follow; you have to be very careful about them. So
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let's begin. In terms of like the actual way a paragraph
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looks: you have to indent or skip a line. So let me just make sure you understand what an indent is.
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This is an indent, the first line a little bit pushed in or you can make
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sure you skip a line between paragraphs. But don't do both. If you skip a line, don't indent.
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Okay? That's the main thing. Now, that's in terms of the way it looks.
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In terms of content -- and this, I can't stress this enough -- very, very, very important:
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one central idea in one paragraph. Okay? I've seen many people, I've seen many essays where
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you start a paragraph talking about one thing, and then you go off on a tangent and talk
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about something completely unrelated. So for example: if you start a paragraph and you're
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talking about apples, continue to talk about apples. If you go to oranges, that's maybe
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okay because you're still talking about fruit. But if you start with apples, go to oranges,
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go to bananas, and then end up with monkeys in space there's a bit of a problem; the reader
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has no idea what you're talking about. One paragraph, one central idea.
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Now, make sure that you tell the reader what this central idea is. This is your thesis statement.
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Okay? It's a very general sentence. All it does is introduce the topic of the
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paragraph, nothing else. All the details come after.
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So speaking of details, we'll talk about details in detail, but all other ideas, all the other
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sentences, all your sentences with the details must directly relate back to the main idea.
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So let's say here is your thesis statement; very general, every sentence after must relate
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back to that thesis statement. Okay? You can't go off to another idea. Everything must support
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this, must talk about the same topic. Very important. Okay?
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How long should your paragraph be? Technically, a paragraph could be one sentence, but in
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an academic essay that rarely happens. But it could be any length you want, as long as
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you're still on that one topic, as long as you still have things to write and things
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to say about that topic, say it. If you have four sentences, fine; if you have 10 sentences,
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also okay. Again, for IELTS, TOEFL, SAT students: four, five sentences should be your limit.
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You can't be too long because you don't have time and you're going to start making mistakes.
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So now, the details. Very important to have lots of details. Why is this topic important
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to your overall idea of your essay? Not only tell me what is the topic, what is the thesis
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statement of the paragraph, make sure you explain to me why this is important to the
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general idea of the essay. Give me your reasons. Now, why is it important? And then reasons,
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why you think what you're saying supports this idea. Examples, always use examples because
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giving me the reasons is okay; examples make me see exactly what you're trying to say.
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Very easy for me to understand what you're trying to say.
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Now, in terms of flow, in terms of the way the reader can approach the paragraph, you
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have to have bridges. What is, what do bridges mean? Basically, when you have one idea in
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this sentence, you must connect it to the next sentence, you must connect it to the
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next sentence. Every sentence must have a link to the next sentence. This creates flow,
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makes it much easier to read and understand, and it keeps you on the one topic.
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Now, key terms. If you're talking about something specific and you have to use a key term, use
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it as many times as you need to. Otherwise, avoid repetition.
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Try not to use the same word more than once in one paragraph. Okay? For example: if you're using the word "moreover"
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in the paragraph, don't use it, don't use "moreover" again -- use "in addition to",
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use "furthermore", "another", etc. Try to avoid using one word more than once, especially
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in the same paragraph. But sometimes you'll get words, like for example you're writing
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an essay about parents. Not many words you can replace for "parents" so if you have to
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say "parents", "parents", "parents", "parents", so be it, do that. Once in a while:
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"mom and dad", "mother and father" but you don't want to add like "mother and father" three words,
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"parents" one word. Shorter is better, so keep that in mind.
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At the end of your paragraph when you're coming to the end, if this is part of your body -- means
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there's another paragraph coming -- leave me some sort of bridge to the next paragraph.
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Or if you can't do that, then just conclude the paragraph, make sure it's a very clear
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statement that this idea is finished; I'm done talking about this idea and then start
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your next paragraph with some bridge to the previous one. So one paragraph connects to
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the next paragraph. Same idea with flow: sentence connects to sentence, paragraph connects to
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paragraph. Okay? Now of course the easiest way to understand all this is to look at an
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actual paragraph and see all these points in it. Okay? So let's do that.
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Okay, don't be scared. This is a paragraph. Okay? First, before we do anything, let me
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read it to you so in case you can't see it clearly.
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"Great changes require a powerful hand to guide them and push them forward. Governments
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have the power and influence of the law to support them. Moreover, they have access to
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means with which to enforce the law and punish offenders. Individuals and corporations that
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pollute our air and waters will not stop doing so as long as they can profit from this action
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and do not fear consequences. A steel producer, for instance, will not cease dumping waste
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in a nearby river if it does not affect its bottom line. Taxing this company, on the other
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hand, might make it change its way of doing business. Yet, it is this very question of
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costs that limits anyone but the government to act against pollution."
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Okay, here's my paragraph. First of all, let me back up a little bit. My essay, what is
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my essay about? General topic: pollution. What is the question? Who is responsible to
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fix it? I say government is responsible to fix it. I suggested three reasons in my introduction:
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power, cost, credibility. Okay? This is my first body paragraph. I listed three reasons:
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power, cost, credibility. My first paragraph will also be my first reason mentioned.
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I mentioned power in my introduction, I will talk about power in my first paragraph. Okay?
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So first of all, I have my indent, okay? I prefer indent, some people prefer spacing.
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But to be honest, figure out what style guide your professor or your company or whoever
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is asking you to use. There is MLA, APA, Chicago Manual of Style, each of them will tell you
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how to do this; to indent or to leave a line, etc., capitalization. Style guides are actually
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very good sources of learning English. Very boring books, but very useful books.
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Okay. Oh sorry, let me just mention also: OWL, OWL at Perdue is a very good website;
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lots of information to help you with writing. Okay, so I have my indent. Now, "Great changes
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require a powerful hand to guide them and push them forward." Have I said anything here?
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No. All I did was talk about change because that's what my general topic of the essay
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is, and power because that's my first focus. I'm going to talk about the power. Okay? Very,
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very general. "Governments have the power and influence of the law", so now here we
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go, I had... Where'd I go? "Powerful" and I'm still talking about power. I'm connecting
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the two sentences. Next, I introduce a new idea: "the law". Much
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more specific. Where does their power come from? It comes from the law. "...influence
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of the law to support them. Moreover," now, I'm not going to a new idea; I'm adding to
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this idea that I just mentioned. "...they have access to means" - means ways of doing
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things - "with which to enforce the law". So here, again, another idea. Enforce means
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put into effect, make sure that it actually happens. "...enforce the law and punish offenders."
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So they have the power of the law, with this power they can enforce and punish. Everything,
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I'm connecting everything to everything. Offenders, now here I'm talking about offenders.
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"Individuals and corporations that pollute", these are the offenders. So one sentence flows
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into the next sentence, into the next sentence. "...pollute our air and waters will not stop
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doing so as long as they can profit". Okay? So here's my next idea. They will not stop
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polluting because we're still talking about pollution. Okay? They will not, as long as
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they can profit, as long as they're making money. Why do people pollute? Because it pays
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to pollute. "...action and do not fear consequences." So they don't fear punishment and the law
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doesn't scare them. Okay? And again, we're still talking about pollution.
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"A steel producer, for instance," I'm introducing an example. Okay? If you can introduce a real
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example like the name of the steel company, even better. But I don't want to offend anyone;
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I'm keeping it a little bit more general. "The steel producer will not cease", now before...
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Here's the word "stop", I don't want to use the word "stop" again. Why? Because I have
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other words. I have the word "cease", "cease" means "stop". Okay? Vocabulary variety very
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important. "...will not cease dumping" - it means throwing in or throwing away - "waste
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in a nearby river" - waste, pollution, I'm still on the same topic - "...if it does not
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affect its bottom line." Now I'm not sure if everybody knows what "bottom line" is,
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but "bottom line" basically means "profit". I'm still connecting the ideas using different
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words. "Taxing this company", so taxing is a form
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of punishment for companies especially. "Taxing this company, on the other hand," - so now
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I'm giving the other side of the situation - "might make it change its way of doing business."
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Again, what is business? Business is all about making money, costs. "Yet, it is this very
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question of costs" - and I'm connecting it. Where? Sorry, to business - "that limits anyone
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but the government to act against pollution." I bring it right back to government acting
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against pollution. This is my overall thesis: governments must act to stop pollution. Right?
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So remember: the paragraph, everything must connect to itself, but the paragraph must
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connect to the essay, to the whole idea. Now, what else did I do here? I introduced the
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topic of "costs". What is my next paragraph going to be? Remember: I had three reasons
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for thinking government must act; power, costs, credibility. My next paragraph is costs.
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I've already introduced this idea, I've started the bridge. In the next paragraph, I will
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end the bridge, get into my new topic. Costs and power are two different ideas. One paragraph:
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power, one paragraph: cost, one paragraph: credibility, and then of course your conclusion.
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Okay? So you have all these things, everything connects, sentence variety. Make sure that
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you're sticking to one topic, make sure you're preparing the reader for the next topic, and
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make sure that everything connects to the overall idea of the essay. Okay?
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If you need some more help with this and you have some more questions, go to www.engvid.com.
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You can leave me a comment and I will get back to you. There will also be a little bit
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of a quiz there to make sure you understand all this. Excuse me. And don't forget to go
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to YouTube and subscribe to my channel. And of course, come back, see me again. Thank you.