Any written task for the class, whether it is a dissertation in polish, or perhaps a paper or an essay on history, is associated with a laborious period associated with digging through hundreds, if not thousands, of definitions on Wikipedia.

Having some experience in writing shorter and longer works, I decided to share with you my tips. Here are 6 tips on how to write better essays,  which I picked up from the works essaywriter.ca ,  so as not to go crazy, and by the way to get a good rating.

Each of the paragraphs should contain a thematic sentence

In the introduction it is a thesis, in the end it is a summary sentence, and in each of the paragraphs it should be a reference to the main argument or issue raised in the given paragraph.

Seamless connections between paragraphs help to make your work more transparent

The work must in some way "flow", because only then it will be pleasant to read. The last sentence of the paragraph should somehow refer to the beginning of the next.

Introduction and ending is a frame for the content

Treat the introduction and ending as a frame for the entire content-they are important because they close the entire message contained in the work.

Thesis is the basis

Without a good thesis, there's no good job. Try to make it concrete. I'll give you two examples:

Weak thesis: Toronto  is a cool city.

Strong thesis: Toronto is a cool city, because it has a well-developed public transport network.

Quote judiciously

Quotes may support your thesis, but remember not to use them too much, because your work can turn into someone else's work.

Do not break, that is, about multi-subject sentences

Be clear. Short sentences aren't cool. Try to ensure that during reading you can go along with the work, stopping where you need to think. Every job is different, and every job flows a little differently, but no one likes too many stops.