Guys sekarang gw mau bahas "Transitions:
Moreover, furthermore, in addition, therefore, consequently etc."mdhn bisa bantu kalian yak,, yuk capcus~
Purpose of Transition
Words
Transition words help a written piece to flow more
smoothly. Within these types of words, your writing will become choppy.
However, sometimes, when a writer is advised to use a new type of device in his
or her writing, that person will tend to start sprinkling it in everywhere.
Transition words should really fall very naturally throughout a composition.
Moreover
You can use “moreover” to
replace “and in addition.” It normally begins the second
independent clause in a sentence, following a semicolon.Moreover is a transition, so you use it to make
something follow another.
Here’s an
example with correct punctuation:
-The hairdresser had dyed his hair the wrong color; moreover, the hair turned green when she
tried to correct the error.
Futhermore
You use furthermore to add more information to what was already said or written.Futhermore is transitions part of
the Academic
Word List and almost always used at the beginning of
a sentence.
Example:
We believe
that the project is possible. Furthermore, we believe that we can
do it within a few months.
In addition
In addition, additionally or also, joins two
sentences (independent clauses.) The word introduces
additional information. These words are often called transition
words or conjunctive adverbs. (Also tends to be less
formal than in addition or additionally).
Examples:
-Anne and Alex act and sing. In addition, they dance.
-She must dance gracefully. In addition, she must dance precisely.
Therefore
Therefore - (used to introduce a logical conclusion) from that
fact or reason or as a result; it’s a conjunctive adverb (the term is not
important!).
Examples:
-those people have their umbrellas up: therefore, it must be raining
-they heard the warning on the radio and therefore took another route
Consequently
“Consequently” is very similar to “so” and “therefore.” Like
“therefore” it’s a conjunctive adverb (the term is not important!). It usually
appears in the middle of sentence, but it may also be used at the beginning of
sentence. If you know what the word “consequence” means, you shouldn’t have any
trouble with this.
Examples:
-Hector
decided not to use a map; consequently, he got
lost and never found his way out of the forest. There he died.
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