Transition Words
Without transitions, writing feels like a list of unconnected sentences. With them, ideas flow naturally from one to the next. Learn to use the right transitions to guide readers through time, space, and logic.
The Glue of Good Writing
Same events, completely different flow:
"I went to school. I went home. I did homework."
"First, I trudged to school. Later, I walked home. Finally, I tackled my homework."
What Are Transition Words?
Transition words are the bridges between your ideas. They tell readers how sentences and paragraphs relate to each other: Are you adding information? Showing contrast? Explaining a cause and effect? Moving through time or space?
Without transitions, readers have to guess how ideas connect. With them, your writing guides readers smoothly from one thought to the next.
The Connection Test
Read two sentences in a row. Can you tell how they relate? If not, you need a transition. Ask yourself: "What's the relationship here? Time? Contrast? Cause?" Then choose a transition that signals that relationship.
Your Transition Toolkit
Different transitions signal different relationships between ideas.
| Purpose | Transition Words |
|---|---|
| Time | First, Then, Later, Meanwhile, Eventually, Finally, After, Before, Soon |
| Contrast | However, Yet, But, Although, Despite, Nevertheless, On the other hand |
| Cause/Effect | Therefore, Consequently, As a result, Because, Thus, So |
| Addition | Moreover, Furthermore, In addition, Also, Besides, Best of all |
| Location | Beyond, Inside, Above, Beneath, Nearby, Further, Deeper |
| Comparison | Similarly, Likewise, Just like, In the same way, As |
Before & After Examples
See how transitions transform choppy writing into smooth flow.
Technique: Use time transitions to show sequence clearly.
"We packed the car. We drove to the beach. We set up the umbrella."
"First, we loaded the car with towels and snacks. After an hour's drive, we reached the coast. Once there, we staked out our spot and unfurled the umbrella."
Why NSW Markers Notice This
Structure Score
Transitions directly impact your Structure & Organization score. They show you can organize ideas logically and guide readers through your thinking.
Language Score
Using a variety of transitions (not just "then" and "and") demonstrates Language & Vocabulary sophistication. It shows range.
The Paragraph Start Check
Look at the first word of each paragraph. Do they all start the same way? Varying your paragraph openers (with transitions, descriptions, or dialogue) shows structural awareness.
Common Traps to Avoid
The "And Then" Chain
"And then... and then... and then..." This is a list, not a story. Vary your time transitions: "After that... Eventually... Finally..."
Mechanical Transitions
"Firstly... Secondly... Thirdly..." sounds like an essay, not a narrative. In stories, embed transitions more naturally within sentences.
Over-Transitioning
Not every sentence needs a transition. Too many make writing feel over-explained. Use them strategically where relationships aren't clear.
Try It Yourself
Add transitions to connect these choppy sentences.
"I went to school. I went home. I did homework."
Advanced Technique: Paragraph Hooks
The strongest transitions connect the end of one paragraph to the beginning of the next.
"...Her wave from the taxi window was the last I saw of her."
"Five years would pass before that wave meant anything again."
The "wave" at the end of one paragraph becomes a hook at the start of the next. This creates anticipation and connects ideas across paragraphs.
Practice Transitions in the Writing Gym
Our Writing Gym has exercises specifically designed to help you master the art of smooth transitions. Get instant AI feedback on your flow.