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Example Paragraph Unit 3 • Writers use examples to help readers understand what they mean. • A good example supports a more general idea with something specific. • Writers use examples as supporting details. • Read exercise 3 –page 56 Vocab exercise 5 page 54 Vocab exercise 2 page 55 Example Organization • An example paragraph gives examples so that the reader clearly understands the writer’s ideas about a topic. Topic sentence: 1- the first sentence introduces the topic. 2- it also includes the controlling idea, or what the writer will say about the topic. Supporting sentences: 1- the middle sentences give examples that support the controlling idea. 2- these examples give a clear picture of the writer’s specific meaning. Concluding sentence: The last sentence of a paragraph restates the topic and what the writer has said about it. Using Examples as Supporting Details: • Effective examples have the following features: 1- They are specific. 2- They relate clearly to the controlling idea. 3- They do not simply restate the topic sentence. topic Controlling idea My mother is a good neighbor. Now read the following supporting sentences. It supports the controlling idea by giving concrete, specific examples. ** she always invites people from our neighborhood over the dinner. However, this sentence is not an effective example. **she enjoys gardening. • An example often begins with the phrase ( For example, or For instance,) followed by a comma (,). • **He likes to stay in shape. For example, he runs six miles every day before work. • Sometimes the writers use a semi colon (;) to connect a general sentence with a specific example beginning with ( for example, or for instance.) • ** Our teacher is entertaining; for instance, sometimes he uses puppets to teach grammar. • Do exercise 3– page 61 Editing Your Writing • 1- Use the simple present tense to express habits and routines. • ** I walk up at 6:00 every day. • 2- Also use the simple present to write about general truths and scientific facts. • **Babies are a great responsibility. Forming the Simple Present: Affirmative Statements Subject I you we they he she it Base verb / base verb+S eat eats Negative Statements Subject healthy food healthy food I you we they he she it do/ does + Not Base form of verb do not eat healthy food. does not eat healthy food. Subject –Verb Agreement • • • • • • • • • 1- A verb must agree in number with its subject. ** we are tired. ** we is tired. 2- use a plural verb following two or more nouns that are joined by (and). ** Mary and her sister live in Las Vegas. 3- use a singular verb following a group noun when it talks about the group as a whole. ** The class goes on a field trip every month. 4- use a singular verb following a noun in expressions that refer to a single member of a group. ** one of the students owns a restaurant. • • Confessions of a Slob A quick tour through my house will convince you that I am an extremely messy person. In fact, some would say I'm a slob. Starting in my bedroom, you will see clothes tossed around as if thieves had just looted the place. T-shirts dangle from door knobs, socks sit balled up on top of the dresser, and blue jeans cover the floor like a drop cloth. A trail of shoes and sneakers leads you out of the bedroom and into the bathroom. There you will stand on a sopping towel and see a blow-dryer and a copy of Newsweek lying on the sink alongside an uncapped tube of Crest. Just behind you is the towel rack: no towel, naturally, just a dripping shirt and a crusty old bathrobe belt. Next to the bathroom is the kitchen--slob headquarters. To the left are erupting bags of garbage, a bald tire, and a tall stack of yellow newspapers. To the right you'll notice a greasy oven stacked high with pots and--beside it--a sink full of gray water and dirty dishes. Editor’s Checklist: • Put a check ( ) as appropriate: 1- Did you check for subject-verb agreement?---2- Did you use present tense verbs correctly?---3- Did you check to make sure there are no contractions?---4- Did you capitalize the first letter of each sentence and put end punctuation at the end?---5- Does the topic sentence introduce the topic and contain a controlling idea?---- • 6- Does the paragraph include specific examples to help the reader understand your point of view?---• 7- Do the examples support the topic and controlling idea?---• 8- Does the paragraph have a concluding sentence that restates the topic sentence?---• 9- Do all the subjects and verbs agree?----