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Hi, this is my paragraph. Sentence 1. Sentence 2. Sentence 3. Sentence 4. Sentence 5. OK DONE PARAGRAPH. Thanks, is this paragraph of the day?

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that is an over used meme. I will brace my you know what for when i need it. and since i need 3 more sentences... sentence 4. sentence 5.

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giphy.gif another useless topic

 

Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers.
A peck of pickled peppers Peter Piper picked.
If Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers,
Where's the peck of pickled peppers Peter Piper picked?

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Hi, this is my paragraph. Sentence 1. Sentence 2. Sentence 3. Sentence 4. Sentence 5. OK DONE PARAGRAPH. Thanks, is this paragraph of the day?

You forgot to indent the paragraph! No place for paragraphs like these here!

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Is that Thor?

Thor has a Hammer, not a sword. Plus, he dresses up in a ridiculous costume, not an 18th-century fur robe and iron armor. He has golden hair, not brown. He doesn't appear in weird memes like what I just posted. Need I go on? :P

 

 

 

Yes, that was a paragraph..... :mellow:

 

 

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I have a paragraph!! :) 

The oldest classical Greek and Latin writing had little or no space between words, and could be written in boustrophedon (alternating directions). Over time, text direction (left to right) became standardized, and word dividers and terminal punctuation became common. The first way to divide sentences into groups was the original paragraphos, similar to an underscore at the beginning of the new group.[3] The Greek paragraphos evolved into the pilcrow (¶), which in English manuscripts in the Middle Ages can be seen inserted inline between sentences. The hedera leaf (e.g. ☙) has also been used in the same way.

220px-United_States_Constitution.jpg
 
Indented paragraphs demonstrated in the US Constitution

In ancient manuscripts, another means to divide sentences in into paragraphs was a line break (newline) followed by an initial at the beginning of the next paragraph. An initial is an oversize capital letter, sometimes outdented beyond the margin of text. This style can be seen, for example, in the original Old English manuscript of Beowulf. Outdenting is still used in English typography, though not commonly.[4] Modern English typography usually indicates a new paragraph by indenting the first line. This style can be seen in the (handwritten)United States Constitution from 1787. For additional ornamentation, a hedera leaf or other symbol can be added to the inter-paragraph whitespace, or put in the indentation space.

A second common modern English style is to use no indenting, but add vertical whitespace to create "block paragraphs." On a typewriter, a double carriage return produces a blank line for this purpose; professional typesetters (or word processing software) may put in an arbitrary vertical space by adjusting leading. This style is very common in electronic formats, such as on the World Wide Web and email.

Typographical considerations[edit]

Widows and orphans occur when the first line of a paragraph is the last line in a column or page, or when the last line of a paragraph is the first line of a new column or page.

Professionally printed material in English typically does not indent the first paragraph, but indents those that follow. For example, Robert Bringhurst states that we should "Set opening paragraphs flush left."[4] Bringhurst explains as follows.

"The function of a paragraph is to mark a pause, setting the paragraph apart from what precedes it. If a paragraph is preceded by a title or subhead, the indent is superfluous and can therefore be omitted."

The Elements of Typographic Style states that "at least one en [space]" should be used to indent paragraphs after the first,[4] noting that that is the "practical minimum".[5] An em space is the most commonly used paragraph indent.[5] Miles Tinker, in his book Legibility of Print, concluded that indenting the first line of paragraphs increases readability by 7%, on the average.[6]

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Hi, this is my paragraph. Sentence 1. Sentence 2. Sentence 3. Sentence 4. Sentence 5. OK DONE PARAGRAPH. Thanks, is this paragraph of the day?

Forgot to add a conclusion and a introduction

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Thor has a Hammer, not a sword. Plus, he dresses up in a ridiculous costume, not an 18th-century fur robe and iron armor. He has golden hair, not brown. He doesn't appear in weird memes like what I just posted. Need I go on? :P

 

 

 

Yes, that was a paragraph..... :mellow:

 

 

I thought he has a microphone not a sword  :mellow:

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Must be a very deadly microphone made out of steel and with 2 sharp edges.... :mellow:

check my pm fast if possible... ( i dont know here to message you )

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