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kumpel [21]
3 years ago
5

What are five examples of transition words

English
1 answer:
Lilit [14]3 years ago
6 0

Answer:

The most basic transition words are conjunctions that join words, phrases or clauses together. For example, words like "and," "but" and "or" can connect two sentences together:

I ran home, and I got there just in time.

I ran home, but I was still late.

As you can see in the example above, even simple conjunctions serve different purposes. The first sentence uses "and" as a transition word that connects the two occurrences equally. The second sentence uses "but," which introduces a contrast. Knowing what different transition words mean will help you choose the ones that best get your point across.

Other transition words are adverbs that describe the way an action is performed or how it relates to another idea. For example:

I went to the mall after he gave me my paycheck.

Explanation:

-cause and effect: consequently, therefore, accordingly, as a result, because, for this reason, hence, thus

-sequence: furthermore, in addition, moreover, first, second, third, finally, again, also, and, besides, further, in the first place, last, likewise, next, then, too

-comparison or contrast: similarly, also, in the same way, likewise, although, at the same time, but, conversely, even so, however, in contrast, nevertheless, nonetheless, notwithstanding, on the contrary, otherwise, still, yet

-example: for example, for instance, in fact, indeed, of course, specifically, that is, to illustrate

-purpose: for this purpose, for this reason, to this end, with this object

time or location: nearby, above, adjacent to, below, beyond, farther on, here, opposite to, there, to the south, before, after, later, afterward, immediately, in the meantime, meanwhile, now, since, soon, then, while

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Answer:

B is the complete sentence.

Explanation:

This is because the transition word "when" is used to link two complete sentences.

When links the two sentences "everyone left the party" and "the room was full of tables, and the floor was covered with confetti.

The sentence everyone left the party is a complete sentence because it has a subject (everyone) followed by a verb (left).

The sentence the room was full of tables and the floor was covered with confetti is a complete sentence because it has two subjects (the room, the floor) followed by two verbs ( was full of, covered).

A is not a complete sentence because After links a sentence with a fragment. "Complete with fireworks" does not have a subject, nor a verb, so it cannot be a complete sentence.

B is not a complete sentence because it has a linkage, "Now that", with no second sentence. It only has the one sentence of  "captain is the head of our school football team.

Hope this helps!

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The question is a bit vague, but I'd say D because a monster who saves a child and then gets shot by the father would surely contribute to "monsters' hatred of humans"
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