The following list is categorized by relationship type and shows some examples of general and useful transition phrases.
Hence, therefore, hence, hence, therefore, is therefore the same.
Order: In addition, furthermore, furthermore, first, second, third, last, once again, and even more first, last, same, next, and then
Comparison or comparison: Similarly, equally, nevertheless, conversely, conversely, conversely, nevertheless, nevertheless, nevertheless, nevertheless, instead of, instead of,
For example, in fact, in fact, of course, specifically, the explanation
Time or place: near, up, next, down, over, far, here, opposite, there, south, front, after, after, after, immediately after, from now,
The time transition phrase above also helps to organize process analysis articles (Table 1: Transition words and phrases representing time and Table 2: Phrases of illustration). The first, second, third, next, last word etc. are clues that will guide you and organize the contents of the article. Begin by creating a rough overview of the possible information you can include in each step. Consider building a paragraph based on the complexity of each step. In complex steps, the entire paragraph is dedicated. If less complicated procedures continue to be deleted, put them in one paragraph.
Transitions within paragraphs help to predict what will happen before the reader reads. In paragraphs, the conversion is often a single word or phrase. However, words similar but while similar to while, for example other phrases can be used as transitions between sentences and ideas. For other examples, please refer to "General migration device list" below. The word "those" refers to the discussion advocated by the author in the previous paragraph. If the author writes instead "complex", our readers may not know psychologically to relate the previous discussion to this sentence. The use of the word "that", including all forms of references before this paragraph, is gesture.
Transition words and phrases represent logical relationships between sentences and ideas, so they are usually organized according to the type of relationship they convey, as shown below. This is a common transition word and phrase that helps to show the logical relationship between sentences and ideas in sentences. Effectively using transition words and phrases may be surprising to improve sentences. Transitions can serve as a "binder" to help combine your thoughts and sentences and will help you and your readers move smoothly and logically from part of your paper to the next section can do.