a sentence is a complete thought to have a complete sentence you need a subject and verb "In its earliest forms" would be a prepositional phrase a transition sentence is a sentence that transitions between paragraphs or ideas
First you need a topic sentence. In a topic sentence you should have a detailed hooking sentence(to keep the reader). Then mention your topic and what you will be talking about, and a conclusion sentence. For the fat juicy meat in the middle of your piece you will need 3 paragraphs (at the minimum) about your experience. Last but not least you need a conclusion paragraph. In a conclusion paragraph you should have a hook sentence and mention the main ideas. Don't forget to add lots of detail.
Enough. An abstract of a scientific journal paper is usually one paragraph. It may, rarely, be technically two (or even three) paragraphs, but the additional "paragraphs" are usually limited to a single sentence each.
Paragraphs that lack coherence or smooth flow between sentences and ideas can benefit from transition words. These words help guide readers through the text and signal relationships between different points. Adding transition words can improve the clarity and organization of a paragraph, making it easier for the reader to follow the overall argument or narrative.
you need to have paragraphs in a autobiography
The general idea: You need an introductory paragraph and a concluding paragraph. The middle 3 paragraphs need to explain the ideas presented and support the conclusion.
To fit 5 pages with only 7 paragraphs, you would need to have longer paragraphs that span multiple pages. Each paragraph would need to cover a significant amount of content and be broken down logically to maintain coherence and flow. Consider using subheadings or bullet points to organize your ideas within each paragraph.
An empty sentence is a sentence that say too little. The sentence maybe complete with all the right words in all the right places, but need ideas.
First of all you need to write down your ideas about the topic. You can't write a good essay without doing planning.Write a word map or spider diagram of everything you can think of regarding the topic. As you write down your thoughts group together similar ideas. When you have your ideas and thoughts in groups try to think about how many paragraphs you are going to have in the 'body' of your essay.If you only need three or four paragraphs in the body of your essay you may have too many groups/thoughts so you can regroup your ideas or leave some out.Each paragraph should have a topic sentence which states the main idea of the paragraph then the rest of the paragraph explains or gives examples of the topic sentence. Each paragraph should be about a different 'point' in your essay.Don't repeat things you write about, present you ideas logically and in order use words like firstly, secondly to introduce each paragraph (idea).You also need to have a good introduction and a good conclusion
All of the information you will need on your trip is located in your guide booklet.
This answer is given assuming you mean to an essay or paper. I wasn't completely sure what you meant. The introduction of a paper is supposed to draw the reader in. You need your first sentence, or your lead, to be atention grabbing. If you are writing about a novel the first sentence is a good place to introduce the title and author. The last sentence of you paragraph is a thesis statement. It should have three prongs. The prongs capture the main ideas of the other paragraphs in your paper.
A narrative is as many paragraphs as you need to tell the story -- but it's usually more than just a couple of paragraphs.