Shahid Paragraph PDF
Shahid Paragraph PDF
Shahid Paragraph PDF
I. Topic Sentence
What is the topic sentence? The topic sentence is the first sentence in a paragraph.
What does it do? It introduces the main idea of the paragraph.
How do I write one? Summarize the main idea of your paragraph. Make clear what your
paragraph will be about.
Example: Canada is one of the best countries in the world to live in. First, Canada has an
excellent health care system. All Canadians have access to medical services at a reasonable
price. Second, Canada has a high standard of education. Students are taught by well‐trained
teachers and are encouraged to continue studying at university. Finally, Canada's cities are clean
and efficiently managed. Canadian cities have many parks and lots of space for people to live. As
a result, Canada is a desirable place to live.
II. Supporting Details
What are supporting sentences? They come after the topic sentence, making up the body of a
paragraph.
What do they do? They give details to develop and support the main idea of the paragraph.
How do I write them? You should give supporting facts, details, and examples.
Example: Canada is one of the best countries in the world to live in. First, Canada has an
excellent health care system. All Canadians have access to medical services at a reasonable
price. Second, Canada has a high standard of education. Students are taught by well‐trained
teachers and are encouraged to continue studying at university. Finally, Canada's cities are clean
and efficiently managed. Canadian cities have many parks and lots of space for people to live. As
a result, Canada is a desirable place to live.
III. Closing Sentence
What is the closing sentence? The closing sentence is the last sentence in a paragraph.
What does it do? It restates the main idea of your paragraph.
How do I write one? Restate the main idea of the paragraph using different words.
Example: Canada is one of the best countries in the world to live in. First, Canada has an
excellent health care system. All Canadians have access to medical services at a reasonable
price. Second, Canada has a high standard of education. Students are taught by well‐trained
teachers and are encouraged to continue studying at university. Finally, Canada's cities are clean
and efficiently managed. Canadian cities have many parks and lots of space for people to live. As
a result, Canada is a desirable place to live.
Example #2: Alexander the Great
Start with a topic sentence that clearly identifies the main point(s) of the paragraph:
Alexander the Great was a successful ruler because his actions created long lasting
effects on cultures that continue to the present day.
Example (Think of an example that supports your thesis statement):
One example of his legacy was the creation of a Hellenistic society.
Explanation of Example (What does this specific example mean? Be specific. Expand your
example by providing additional important details):
Hellenism was the combination of Greek, Persian, and Egyptian cultures. During this
remarkable time period, people were encouraged to pursue a formal education and
produce many different kinds of art. New forms of math, science, and design made a
great impact on society.
How does the example prove your thesis (Why is this example important? How does it support
the main claim of your thesis statement?):
If this new way of life had not been as successful as it was, Alexander’s legacy would not
be as memorable and groundbreaking.
Concluding Sentence (Sum up the main argument of your paragraph in one sentence):
Because he conquered many countries and blended together many different cultures,
Alexander the Great is widely recognized for his achievements and credited with being
one of the greatest rulers in history.
Putting it altogether:
Alexander the Great was a successful ruler because his actions created long lasting
effects on cultures that continue to the present day. One example of his legacy was the
creation of a Hellenistic society. Hellenism was the combination of Greek, Persian, and
Egyptian cultures. During this remarkable time period, people were encouraged to
pursue a formal education and produce many different kinds of art. New forms of math,
science, and design made a great impact on society. If this new way of life had not been
as successful as it was, Alexander’s legacy would not be as memorable and
groundbreaking. Because he conquered many countries and blended together many
different cultures, Alexander the Great is widely recognized for his achievements and
credited with being one of the greatest rulers in history.
Examples #3‐4
Magellan’s circumnavigation [of the globe] forever altered the Western world’s ideas about
cosmology – the study of the universe and our place in it – as well as geography. It
demonstrated, among other things, that the earth was round, that the Americas were not part
of India but were actually a separate continent, and that oceans covered most of the earth’s
surface. The voyage conclusively demonstrated that the earth is, after all, one world. But it also
demonstrated that it was a world of unceasing conflict, both natural and human. The cost of
these discoveries in terms of loss of life and suffering was greater than anyone could have
anticipated at the start of the expedition. [The voyagers] had survived an expedition to the ends
of the earth, but more than that, they had endured a voyage into the darkest recesses of the
human soul. (Lawrence Bergreen, Over the Edge of the World)
During the Civil War era many factions sought to change America. Remarkable speakers spread
their ideas through oratory, thrilling their audiences through powerful speeches that appealed
to both emotion and logic. Frederick Douglass, a black American, fought for black civil rights
through compelling speeches like “What to the slave is the Fourth of July?” which depicted the
terrors of slavery in graphic detail. Abraham Lincoln, on the other hand, spoke peacefully and
optimistically during his Second Inaugural Address to demonstrate his desire for peace and
reconciliation with the Confederate states. Both speakers captivated their audiences through
persuasive diction, tone, and argumentative methods in an effort to win them over and gain
their support.
Conflicts within the middling orders were more pronounced than peaceful cooperation. Tariffs
on imports were a boon to domestic manufacturers but a burden on merchants. Distribution of
largesse from the central government, whether paintings donated to provincial museums or
subsidies provided to struggling industries let to disputes about favoritism among cities and
regions. The issue of state support for sectarian schools became a contentious issue between
devout and secular citizens. The location of the railroad network, which speedily spread
through most of Europe in the 1840s and 1850s, became a matter of virtual economic life and
death across the map. And, … limitations on the right to vote on the basis of income were sore
points between bourgeois safely at home in the political elite and bourgeois aspiring to join
them Some of these contests were trivial: in the late nineteenth century, Munich and Berlin
engaged in a rivalry, carried on mainly in the press, over which was the cultural capital of
Germany. But most of the time, the stakes were higher than this. Economic self‐interest,
religious agendas, intellectual convictions, social competition, [and] the proper place of women
became political issues where bourgeois battled bourgeois. (Peter Gay, Schnitzler’s Century)
Slave spirituals often had hidden double meanings.
On one level, spirituals referenced heaven, Jesus, and the soul; but on
another level, the songs spoke about slave resistance.
For example, according to Frederick Douglass, the song “O Canaan,
Sweet Canaan” spoke of slaves’ longing for heaven, but it also
expressed their desire to escape to the North.
Careful listeners heard this second meaning in the following lyrics: “I
don’t expect to stay / Much longer here. / Run to Jesus, shun the
danger. / I don’t expect to stay.”
When slaves sang this song, they could have been speaking of their
departure from this life and their arrival in heaven; however, they also
could have been describing their plans to leave the South and run, not
to Jesus, but to the North.
Slaves even used songs like “Steal Away to Jesus (at midnight)” to
announce to other slaves the time and place of secret, forbidden
meetings.
What whites heard as merely spiritual songs, slaves discerned as
detailed messages. The hidden meanings in spirituals allowed slaves to
sing what they could not say.
Felix Driver, “Henry Morton Stanley and His Critics”
The history of exploration has until recently been dominated by two
sorts of historical writing: biographies, which of necessity focus on the
life and personality of individual explorers, and somewhat Whiggish
general histories, which have tended to celebrate the triumph of
modern geographical science over the mysteries of the earth. Neither
of these approaches is particularly well equipped to meet the
requirements of a more contextual perspective, concerned with the
wider contemporary significance of the ideas and practices of
exploration. In recent years, historians have paid much more attention
to the institutional, intellectual, and social contexts in which projects of
exploration were sustained, emphasizing in particular the relationship
between exploration and empire. Whether explorers like Stanley are
considered to be “progenitors” or merely “precursors’ of the new forms
of imperialism developing during the late nineteenth century, their
labors at the colonial frontier must be seen ii the wider context of
changing relationships between Europe and the non‐European world. It
has been suggested that the attitudes and assumptions of explorers
constitute a kind of “unofficial symbolic imperialism,” helping to define
the cultural terms on which unequal political relations between
colonizer and colonized could subsequently be established. The fact
that British explorers of Africa… received official sanction and support
is, according to this view, but one aspect of their contribution to
imperial history; another is their role in the popularization of myths and
fantasies about the non‐European world. For geographical exploration
did not merely overcome distance; it helped created “imaginative
geographies.” Joseph Conrad once described the most famous African
explorers as “conquerors of truth,” not because they exposed the inner
secretes of distant regions (as they often claimed), but rather because
they established particular ways of reading unknown landscapes.