What does passage mean in a sentence?

What does passage mean in a sentence?

a portion or section of a written work; a paragraph, verse, etc.: a passage of Scripture.

Can a passage be one sentence?

A good rule of thumb is that a paragraph should have at least two (and preferably three) sentences, while a passage could consist of a single sentence.

What’s a passage in writing?

A passage is an excerpt from a piece of literature, or the entire piece. For example, in school you are sometimes asked to write an essay using a passage from a book, such as The Wind in the Willows or Night. A passage might also be an article from a magazine or news story.

How many sentences are in a passage?

In antiquity, a paragraph often was a single thought—and often a single sentence, usually a very long one. Writers today, however, tend not to go on the way classical authors did. In academic writing, most paragraphs include at least three sentences, though rarely more than ten.

How do you create a passage?

5-step process to paragraph development

  1. Decide on a controlling idea and create a topic sentence.
  2. Explain the controlling idea.
  3. Give an example (or multiple examples)
  4. Explain the example(s)
  5. Complete the paragraph’s idea or transition into the next paragraph.

Is a passage the same as a quote?

Whether you’re creating in-text citations in APA or MLA: Find examples in APA style or MLA style. Quoting is a sentence or passage taken directly from a source. To identify a quote, you place quotation marks around the selected passage.

How do you indicate a break in a quote?

Whenever you want to leave out material from within a quotation, you need to use an ellipsis, which is a series of three periods, each of which should be preceded and followed by a space. So, an ellipsis in this sentence would look like . . . this.

How do you start a conversation with a stranger?

I mean strangers.

  1. 1) LET THEM GO SECOND. Silence is awful. It’s so weird.
  2. 2) TALK TO RANDOM PEOPLE ON PURPOSE. The first one is going to be scary.
  3. 3) EMBRACE SMALL TALK. I have a friend who hates small talk.
  4. 4) ASK QUESTIONS. Okay, so now I know the person is from Boston or wherever.

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