CONCLUDING REMARKS.

 
     This is the end of the third part of this book.  In this section, we discussed how to develop paragraphs, according to Time, Process, Space, Example, Comparison, Contrast, Cause, Effect, and Classification.  The purpose of this section was to illustrate how the six “sentence types”, discussed in the previous sections, could be developed into seven-sentence paragraphs.  This method of writing paragraphs is very formal; it is somewhat constrained by the “seven-sentence” rule; it is certainly artificial.  It should be noted that this section is only an introduction.  Furthermore, this method is not meant to compete against the other paragraph-writing methodologies available in many writing textbooks; it is only a complement to them.  You, the writer, must choose the method that works best for you.  The only “absolute” is this: your paragraph must have a clearly-written introduction; it must have  a body; it must have a conclusion that either summarizes the paragraph, or which “points ahead” to the next paragraph. 
     I hope that you will enjoy writing your own paragraphs!