His letter home was only three paragraphs long. From LearnThat.org.
Here is an example of how the title paragraph should be written. From Wordnik.com. [Business News and Business Products, Services, Reports and Advertising. Business News RSS Feed.] Reference
But the nest part of the paragraph is also important. From Wordnik.com. [Blast From the Past] Reference
And yeah, this paragraph is a mess as paragraphs go, I agree. From Wordnik.com. ["Visionary's blind ambition, unintended consequnces."] Reference
This paragraph is the most interesting to me (emphasis added). From Wordnik.com. [New rules for importing cars] Reference
Note 141: This paragraph is a summary of Yan Zhongping 1957, 6-7. back. From Wordnik.com. [Between Winds and Clouds: The Making of Yunnan (Second Century BCE to Twentieth Century CE)] Reference
This paragraph is a very rushed summary of what must have been a very tense event, for him. From Wordnik.com. [Superhero Nation: how to write superhero novels and comic books » Dr Eagle G’s Review Forum] Reference
The importance of this paragraph is the establishment of interest charges for delinquent accounts. From Wordnik.com. [Use Assignment Confirmations] Reference
This paragraph is a paradigm of legal Machiavellianism – and is pretty weak legal reasoning for an academic. From Wordnik.com. [The Volokh Conspiracy » Is the tax power infinite?] Reference
Here's an illustrative paragraph from the apology. From Wordnik.com. [Progressive activists tussle over Islam and homophobia - Boing Boing] Reference
Then in paragraph 14 we get the opposition response. From Wordnik.com. [On the Offensive] Reference
Image: Opening paragraph from the manuscript of 1984. From Wordnik.com. [Nineteen Eighty Four Character Profiles] Reference
Check the tense change in paragraph 3 sometime … or not. From Wordnik.com. [8-BIT PROCRASTINATION • by Stephanie Scarborough] Reference
The second paragraph is taken from the letter sent by Southey to. From Wordnik.com. [Letter 216] Reference
The above paragraph is an example of criticism that IS invective. From Wordnik.com. [Waldo Jaquith - Allen: The Hollywood candidate.] Reference
The first paragraph is terrific enough that I have to quote it in full. From Wordnik.com. [inkblurt · Nussbaum Rants on the death of “Innovation”] Reference
The following is a paragraph from the description of the "Raven" Forward. From Wordnik.com. [Alen, Henry L.] Reference
I was left asking how we got to that great paragraph from the preceding ones. From Wordnik.com. [GONE • by Christopher P. Garlington] Reference
The first paragraph is a mouthful, but it's worth it if you stick to the end. From Wordnik.com. [ccfinlay: This, I Must Blog] Reference
But what use is this information, at the end of a long article, in paragraph 19?. From Wordnik.com. [The Daily Mail cancer story that torpedoes itself in paragraph 19] Reference
And here's a fact: Taylor's first sentence I quoted in the last paragraph is gibberish. From Wordnik.com. [Taylor vs. Cowan] Reference
The reason I have quoted this paragraph is to call attention to the emphasized sentence. From Wordnik.com. [A Modestly Scandalous Confession] Reference
Looking it over, I decide that using the word "body" twice in the same paragraph is icky. From Wordnik.com. [Random Items... Of Doom!] Reference
Source was unable to identify the PW from photographs of the US PW mentioned in paragraph e. From Wordnik.com. [DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE INTELLIGENCE REPORT] Reference
The last sentence in this paragraph is the one that is important – and you’re dead right. From Wordnik.com. [US rejects ’share the Net’ idea] Reference
Now, if I could only figure out how the heck to put in paragraph breaks that STAY in my posts. From Wordnik.com. [A Writer’s Worst Enemy] Reference
(And I agree that the second paragraph is a problem, the second sentence there should GO AWAY!). From Wordnik.com. [GONE • by Christopher P. Garlington] Reference
To Krusty: Very interesting post, but please explain paragraph B. 60 foot-pounds is .458 level. From Wordnik.com. [How Much Kick Can You Take?] Reference
Your 3rd paragraph is so familiar that I have to wonder if you've somehow hacked into my brain!. From Wordnik.com. [Summer? What Summer?] Reference
Number two theme is The Admonition - portend of menace, to be found in paragraph three and four. From Wordnik.com. [Peter Sumaruck] Reference
But Michael Monroe's issue with the "desperately scholarly tone" of the paragraph is nonsensical. From Wordnik.com. [They built you a temple, and locked you away] Reference
Everybody knows you're only one paragraph short of a page, although that paragraph is in Sanskrit. From Wordnik.com. [ON THE BUBBLE - PERSONS OF INTEREST] Reference
Second, the characterization of Secretary Rumsfeld's mindset in the final paragraph is just wrong. From Wordnik.com. [When George Meets John] Reference
Stop trying to explain to people that a paragraph is two of those little chart thingies, side by side. From Wordnik.com. [ccfinlay: Wow, that's not quite what I expected.] Reference
Agree with Russ, although I think the transition sentence in paragraph 9 could be edited to have more impact. From Wordnik.com. [AMEN • by Priscilla Kipp] Reference
Maybe then I'd find out if the alliteration-laden final sentence of the previous paragraph is as annoying as I suspect. From Wordnik.com. [Archive 2006-02-05] Reference
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