Week 2: Discourse Markers

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Week 2: Discourse Markers & Connectors

Discourse markers are words or phrases that manage flow. They act like signposts that tell the reader how one idea relates to the next.

1. Main Families

Addition

  • Furthermore, Moreover, In addition, Also
  • Use these when the new sentence supports or extends the previous point.

Contrast and concession

  • However, Nevertheless, Nonetheless, On the other hand
  • Use these when the next idea pushes back against the previous one.

Cause and effect

  • Because, Since, As
  • Therefore, Thus, Consequently
  • Use these to show reason or result.

Stance and opinion

  • Honestly, To be honest, Frankly, Apparently
  • These show the speaker's attitude, certainty, or source of knowledge.
If the marker changes logic, not just style, read the sentence again. These words control interpretation.

2. Common Sentence Moves

  • Addition: "The report is complete; moreover, it is ready for review."
  • Contrast: "The prototype worked; however, the deployment failed."
  • Cause-effect: "The server was overloaded; therefore, latency increased."
  • Stance: "Apparently, the meeting has been moved."

3. Worked Patterns

Pattern 1: Replace a blunt but

Question: "We finished the sprint, but the deployment failed."
Solution: "We finished the sprint; however, the deployment failed."

Pattern 2: Show result

Question: "The data was noisy. ___, the model underperformed."
Solution: "Therefore" or "Consequently" fits best.

Pattern 3: Show a personal opinion

Question: "___, the draft needs more evidence."
Solution: "Honestly" or "Frankly" depending on tone.

4. Flashcards

<Flashcard front="What does 'Nevertheless' do?" back="It introduces a statement that remains true despite the previous one." /> <Flashcard front="Which markers are best for results?" back="Therefore, Thus, Consequently." /> <Flashcard front="Why use discourse markers?" back="To make the logical relationship between ideas explicit." />

5. Practice Matrix

  • Rewrite 5 informal sentences using formal discourse markers.
  • Label each marker as addition, contrast, cause/effect, or stance.
  • Practice joining two short sentences into one smooth academic sentence.

6. Quick Recall

  • Addition expands.
  • Contrast pivots.
  • Cause and effect explains.
  • Stance reveals the speaker's angle.

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