
English Teacher
Hello to all,
imagine you have written a formal essay and in the last paragraph you want to put a phrase at the beginning of your conclusion.
Is it okay to use "all in all" ?
All in all, I think the technological advancements have made our lives better....
I already found these:
In conclusion,
By way of conclusion,
To sum up,
What are some similar situations that can be used in formal writing?
Not a professional teacher
Bob: How should I end an essay?
Tom: Write the conclusion (the last paragraph). Then stop.
Last edited by emsr2d2; 29-Oct-2019 at 19:57. Reason: Fixed typo
Not a professional teacher
all in all is fine here. It's actually much better than the others you've mentioned.
As a teacher, I'd strongly advise you to be cautious when presenting to your students a set of apparently synonymous discourse markers. They are not all used in identical ways.
I've used "On the whole", "In summary" and "By and large" apart from the ones you've listed.
Not a teacher
Last edited by emsr2d2; 30-Oct-2019 at 09:18. Reason: No teacher (NamelessKing); Changed it to "Not a teacher" (emsr2d2)
To live only for some future goal is shallow. It's the sides of the mountain that sustain life, not the top.
In summary can be used if you do actually intend to follow with a summary but it does not work in the example sentence given here, which is not a summary. The other two are okay in this context but would not work in other contexts.
Again, I'll say that the best phrase to use to open a concluding paragraph depends on what you want to say. You cannot simply memorise a list of synonymous and interchangeable phrases.
Could you please make it clear that you are not a teacher.