Skip to main content

Transitions

 What this handout is about

In this crazy, mixed-up world of ours, transitions glue our ideas and our essays together. This handout will introduce you to some useful transitional expressions and help you employ them effectively.

The function and importance of transitions

In both academic writing and professional writing, your goal is to convey information clearly and concisely, if not to convert the reader to your way of thinking. Transitions help you to achieve these goals by establishing logical connections between sentences, paragraphs, and sections of your papers. In other words, transitions tell readers what to do with the information you present to them. Whether single words, quick phrases, or full sentences, they function as signs that tell readers how to think about, organize, and react to old and new ideas as they read through what you have written.

Transitions signal relationships between ideas—relationships 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 your ideas into a logically coherent argument. Transitions are not just verbal decorations that embellish your 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 your ideas. In providing the reader with these important cues, transitions help readers understand the logic of how your ideas fit together.

Signs that you might need to work on your transitions

How can you tell whether you need to work on your transitions? Here are some possible clues:

  • Your instructor has written comments like “choppy,” “jumpy,” “abrupt,” “flow,” “need signposts,” or “how is this related?” on your papers.
  • Your readers (instructors, friends, or classmates) tell you that they had trouble following your organization or train of thought.
  • You tend to write the way you think—and your brain often jumps from one idea to another pretty quickly.
  • You wrote your paper in several discrete “chunks” and then pasted them together.
  • You are working on a group paper; the draft you are working on was created by pasting pieces of several people’s writing together.

Organization

Since the clarity and effectiveness of your transitions will depend greatly on how well you have organized your paper, you may want to evaluate your paper’s organization before you work on transitions. In the margins of your draft, summarize in a word or short phrase what each paragraph is about or how it fits into your analysis as a whole. This exercise should help you to see the order of and connection between your ideas more clearly.

If after doing this exercise you find that you still have difficulty linking your ideas together in a coherent fashion, your problem may not be with transitions but with the organization. For help in this area (and a more thorough explanation of the “reverse outlining” technique described in the previous paragraph), please see the Writing Center’s handout on the organization.

How transitions work

The organization of your written work includes two elements: (1) the order in which you have chosen to present the different parts of your discussion or argument, and (2) the relationships you construct between these parts. Transitions cannot substitute for good organization, but they can make your organization clearer and easier to follow. Take a look at the following example:

El Pais, a Latin American country, has a new democratic government after having been a dictatorship for many years. Assume that you want to argue that El Pais is not as democratic as the conventional view would have us believe.

One way to effectively organize your argument would be to present the conventional view and then to provide the reader with your critical response to this view. So, in Paragraph A you would enumerate all the reasons that someone might consider El Pais highly democratic, while in Paragraph B you would refute these points. The transition that would establish the logical connection between these two key elements of your argument would indicate to the reader that the information in paragraph B contradicts the information in paragraph A. As a result, you might organize your argument, including the transition that links paragraph A with paragraph B, in the following manner:

Paragraph A: points that support the view that El Pais’s new government is very democratic.

Transition: Despite the previous arguments, there are many reasons to think that El Pais’s new government is not as democratic as typically believed.

Paragraph B: points that contradict the view that El Pais’s new government is very democratic.

In this case, the transition words “Despite the previous arguments,” suggest that the reader should not believe paragraph A and instead should consider the writer’s reasons for viewing El Pais’s democracy as a suspect.

As the example suggests, transitions can help reinforce the underlying logic of your paper’s organization by providing the reader with essential information regarding the relationship between your ideas. In this way, transitions act as the glue that binds the components of your argument or discussion into a unified, coherent, and persuasive whole.

Types of transitions

Now that you have a general idea of how to go about developing effective transitions in your writing, let us briefly discuss the types of transitions your writing will use.

The types of transitions available to you are as diverse as the circumstances in which you need to use them. A transition can be a single word, a phrase, a sentence, or an entire paragraph. In each case, it functions the same way: First, the transition either directly summarizes the content of a preceding sentence, paragraph, or section or implies such a summary (by reminding the reader of what has come before). Then, it helps the reader anticipate or comprehend the new information that you wish to present.

  1. Transitions between sections: Particularly in longer works, it may be necessary to include transitional paragraphs that summarize for the reader the information just covered and specify the relevance of this information to the discussion in the following section.
  2. Transitions between paragraphs: If you have done a good job of arranging paragraphs so that the content of one leads logically to the next, the transition will highlight a relationship that already exists by summarizing the previous paragraph and suggesting something of the content of the paragraph that follows. A transition between paragraphs can be a word or two (however, for example, similarly), a phrase, or a sentence. Transitions can be at the end of the first paragraph, at the beginning of the second paragraph, or in both places.
  3. Transitions within paragraphs: As with transitions between sections and paragraphs, transitions within paragraphs act as cues by helping readers to anticipate what is coming before they read it. Within paragraphs, transitions tend to be single words or short phrases.

Transitional expressions

Effectively constructing each transition often depends upon your ability to identify words or phrases that will indicate for the reader the kind of logical relationships you want to convey. The table below should make it easier for you to find these words or phrases. Whenever you have trouble finding a word, phrase, or sentence to serve as an effective transition, refer to the information in the table for assistance. Look in the left column of the table for the kind of logical relationship you are trying to express. Then look in the right column of the table for examples of words or phrases that express this logical relationship.

Keep in mind that each of these words or phrases may have a slightly different meaning. Consult a dictionary or writer’s handbook if you are unsure of the exact meaning of a word or phrase.

LOGICAL RELATIONSHIPTRANSITIONAL EXPRESSION
Similarityalso, in the same way, just as … so too, likewise, similarly
Exception/Contrastbut, however, in spite of, on the one hand … on the other hand, nevertheless, nonetheless, notwithstanding, in contrast, on the contrary, still, yet
Sequence/Orderfirst, second, third, … next, then, finally
Timeafter, afterward, at last, before, currently, during, earlier, immediately, later, meanwhile, now, recently, simultaneously, subsequently, then
Examplefor example, for instance, namely, specifically, to illustrate
Emphasiseven, indeed, in fact, of course, truly
Place/Positionabove, adjacent, below, beyond, here, in front, in back, nearby, there
Cause and Effectaccordingly, consequently, hence, so, therefore, thus
Additional Support or Evidenceadditionally, again, also, and, as well, besides, equally important, further, furthermore, in addition, moreover, then
Conclusion/Summaryfinally, in a word, in brief, briefly, in conclusion, in the end, in the final analysis, on the whole, thus, to conclude, to summarize, in sum, to sum up, in summary

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

CSS Comments

Comments are used to explain the code and may help when you edit the source code at a later date. Comments are ignored by browsers. A CSS comment is placed inside the  <style>  element, and starts with  /*  and ends with  */ : Example /* This is a single-line comment */ p  {   color :  red ; } Try it Yourself » You can add comments wherever you want in the code: Example p  {   color :  red ;    /* Set text color to red */ } Try it Yourself » Comments can also span multiple lines:  Example /* This is a multi-line comment */ p  {   color :  red ; } Try it Yourself » HTML and CSS Comments From the HTML tutorial, you learned that you can add comments to your HTML source by using the  <!--...-->  syntax. In the following example, we use a combination of HTML and CSS comments: Example < !DOCTYPE  html > < html > < head > < style > p  {   color : ...

พยางค์

การที่เราเปล่งเสียงออกมาจากลำคอครั้งหนึ่ง ๆ นั้น เราเรียกเสียงที่เปล่งออกมาว่า “พยางค์” แม้ว่าเสียงที่เปล่งออกมาจะมีความหมายหรือไม่มีความหมายก็ตาม เช่น เราเปล่งเสียง “สุ” ถึงจะไม่ รู้ความหมาย หรือไม่รู้เรื่องเราก็เรียกว่า ๑ พยางค์ หากเราเปล่งเสียงออกมาอีกครั้งหนึ่งว่า “กร” จะ เป็น “สุกร” จึงจะมีความหมาย คำว่า “สุกร” ซึ่งเปล่งเสียง ๒ ครั้ง เราก็ถือว่ามี๒ พยางค์ เสียงที่เปล่ง ออกมาครั้งเดียวมีความหมาย เช่น นา หมายถึง ที่ปลูกข้าว เสียงที่เปล่งออกมาว่า “นา” นี้เป็น ๑ พยางค์ ลองดูตัวอย่างต่อไปนี้ ไร่ มี๑ พยางค์ ชาวไร่ มี๒ พยางค์ (ชาว-ไร่) สหกรณ์ มี๓ พยางค์ (สะ-หะ-กอน) โรงพยาบาล มี๔ พยางค์ (โรง-พะ-ยา-บาน) นักศึกษาผู้ใหญ่ มี๕ พยางค์ (นัก-สึก-สา-ผู้-ใหญ่) สหกรณ์การเกษตร มี๖ พยางค์ (สะ-หะ-กอน-การ-กะ-เสด) จากตัวอย่างข้างบนนี้สรุปได้ว่า พยางค์ คือ เสียงที่เปล่งออกมาครั้งหนึ่ง จะมีความหมายหรือไม่มีความหมายก็ตาม ถ้าเปล่ง เสียงออกมา ๑ ครั้ง ก็เรียก ๑ พยางค์ สองครั้งก็เรียก ๒ พยางค์ องค์ประกอบของพยางค์ พยางค์เกิดจากการเปล่งเสียงพยัญชนะ สระ และวรรณยุกต์ออกมาพร้อม ๆ กัน พยางค์ที่มี ความหมายอาจจะเป็นพยา...

OENG Sometri: Lecturer, IT Expert, and Public Administrator

👑 Welcome to the Official Blog of Dr. Candidate OENG Sometri 👑 I am a highly dedicated and experienced professional and educator with a strong foundation in Public Administration , Information Technology Engineering , and Foreign Languages . My commitment is to foster a joyful and supportive learning environment, encouraging students to become creative and problem-solving professionals . 💼 Professional Experience & Current Roles Lecturer of Fundamentals of Computer Networking at IIC, Phnom Penh (Aug 2025 – Present) Lecturer of Web Design & C# Programming at WiDCy Institute, Phnom Penh (Sep 2025 – Present) Instructor of ICT at PSIS, Phnom Penh (Sep 2025 – Present) ICT Trainer & Vice-Manager at Postal Operational Department, Cambodia Post (Mar 2025 – Sep 2025) IT Vice-Manager at IT Center, Cambodia Post (Feb 2023 – Mar 2025) Lecturer (Education/English) at Preah Sihamoniraja Buddhist University (PSBU) (2017 – 2025) Vice-Manager, Postal Operational Department at Camb...