A
paragraph (from the
Greek paragraphos, "
to write beside" or "
written beside") is a self-contained unit of a discourse in
writing dealing with a particular point or
idea. Paragraphs consist of one or more
sentences.
[1][2] The start of a paragraph is indicated by beginning on a new line. Sometimes the first line is indented. At various times, the beginning of a paragraph has been indicated by the
pilcrow: ¶.
A written work—be it an essay or a story—is about an idea or concept. An essay explains it; a story narrates it. To help the reader understand and enjoy it, the explanation or narration is broken down into units of text, the paragraph. In an essay, each paragraph explains or demonstrates a key point or thought of the central idea, usually to inform or persuade. In fiction, each paragraph serves to advance the plot, develop a character, describe a scene or narrate an action—all to entertain the reader. All paragraphs support each other, leading the reader from the first idea to the final resolution of the written work.
Now, in my paragragh to entertain the fine people of SS. The story starts out with AS OTHERS (IT DID NOT SAY ME) alway bid low. Get there first, so you can cannibilize what someone else took off. . My 5 ton wrecker was missing so much.. I was the last to pick mine up.
New paragraph, this means a new story.
I did not start a new paragraph, so the meaning of As others.. is still in effect for the whole paragraph..
Could a Teacher please verify this so that we can move on?