Tuesday, December 5, 2017

The Function of Transition Signal

Education English | The Function of Transition Signal | In both academic writing and professional writing, the goal is to convey information clearly and concisely, if not to convert the reader to the way of thinking. According to University of North Carolina (2008) transitions help the writers to achieve to convey information clearly and concisely by establishing logical connections between sentences, paragraphs, and sections of the papers. In other words, transitions tell readers what to do with the information the writers present to them. Whether single words, quick phrases or full sentences, they function as signs for readers that tell them how to think about, organize, and react to old and new ideas as they read through what the writers have written. Transitions signal relationships between ideas such as: "Another example coming up—stay alert!" or "Here's an exception to my previous statement" or
"Although this idea appears to be true, here's the real story." Basically, transitions provide the reader with directions for how to piece together the writer’s ideas into a logically coherent argument. Transitions are not just verbal decorations that embellish the paper by making it sound or read better. They are words with particular meanings that tell the reader to think and react in a particular way to the writer’s ideas. In providing the reader with these important cues, transitions help readers understand the logic of how the writer’s ideas fit together.

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