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Transitions PDF

The document discusses different types of transitions and connectors used to link ideas within and between sentences. It provides lists of coordinators that join two independent clauses, subordinators that make a clause dependent on another, and transitions/connectors used within sentences. It explains how these elements guide the reader through ideas like road signs guide travelers. Using varied transitions and connectors helps readers understand the relationships between ideas.

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Mina Minawy
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
173 views1 page

Transitions PDF

The document discusses different types of transitions and connectors used to link ideas within and between sentences. It provides lists of coordinators that join two independent clauses, subordinators that make a clause dependent on another, and transitions/connectors used within sentences. It explains how these elements guide the reader through ideas like road signs guide travelers. Using varied transitions and connectors helps readers understand the relationships between ideas.

Uploaded by

Mina Minawy
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Transitions and Connectors

COORDINATORS SUBORDINATORS
For After How Provided that Whether
And Although If Since While
Nor As far As Inasmuch as So that Why
But As soon as In case that Than
Or As if Insofar as Through
Yet As though In that Till
So Because Lest Unless
Before No matter how Until
First letters spell Even if Now that When(ever)
FANBOYS Even though Once Wherever

The COORDINATORS above are used to connect simple sentences (or independent clauses) to form compound sentences. In this
sense, coordinators join two simple sentences to form a compound sentence.

The SUBORDINATORS above, plus some others, are used at the beginning of a clause which make the clause dependent, requiring
an additional independent clause to form a complex sentence. A complex sentence is complex because it contains two different types
of clauses, a dependent clause and an independent clause.

TRANSITIONS AND CONNECTORS are neither coordinators nor subordinators. Transitions and connectors are used within
sentences to show relationships between ideas within sentences. Transitions and connectors can be used between sentences to show
relationships between ideas in adjoining sentences, paragraphs, or even major sections of academic papers.

Have you ever taken a long journey to a distant destination on strange roads with only infrequent or poorly designed road signs? It
can be both frightening and frustrating, Like a driver heading toward a destination, your reader is on a journey of discovery of your
ideas, and you can help your reader toward his destination by providing clearly understood transitions and connectors. Transitions and
connectors for your reader are like the road signs that guide the traveller. They help your reader understand your ideas.

Connectors Contrast Emphasis Addition


Therefore However Keep in mind First of all
Similarly Otherwise Remember Another reason is
Hence Instead of Most of all In addition
Then But Most important Also
Consequently Yet The best thing Moreover
Also On the other hand The basic reason The most important reason
Thus Although The chief factor is
Even though Special attention Finally
In contrast to (with) goes to For example
On the Contrary should be paid to This means that
Still Equally important

Time showing Chronology Time Time Comment


When I was five years old Then first Interestingly
As a little girl Next second step Surprisingly
When I grew older Afterwards The third phase Undoubtedly
As a university student After this step next stage Unavoidably
As an adult Finally final Frustratingly

The following subordinating conjunctions and relative pronouns signal how the dependent clause is related to the sentence:
TIME: after, before, since, until, when, while
PLACE: where wherever
REASON: as, because, how, so, that, since
CONDITIONAL: although, if, unless, whether
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: that, which, who, whom, whose

By Erlyn Baack at http://eslbee.com, Advanced Composition for Non-Native Speakers of English

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