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Cause and Effect Are Intertwined

The document explains the concept of cause and effect, emphasizing that they are interconnected and can lead to multiple outcomes. It provides examples across various fields such as history, science, and daily life, illustrating how one event can trigger another. Additionally, it highlights the importance of signal words that indicate cause and effect relationships in writing.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
22 views3 pages

Cause and Effect Are Intertwined

The document explains the concept of cause and effect, emphasizing that they are interconnected and can lead to multiple outcomes. It provides examples across various fields such as history, science, and daily life, illustrating how one event can trigger another. Additionally, it highlights the importance of signal words that indicate cause and effect relationships in writing.

Uploaded by

edy mas supri
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Cause and effect are intertwined.

American poet Ralph Waldo Emerson said, “Cause and effect


are two sides of one fact.”
You can’t have an effect without a cause, nor can you have a cause without an effect.
In cause and effect relationships, there may be multiple causes and multiple effects. The
relationship may cycle on with a cause leading to effects that become a cause for more effects!
Let’s say that you oversleep and are late to a meeting and, because you’re late to the meeting,
you miss out on the delicious pastries the boss brought in. Since you missed the pastries, you’re
hungry and aggravated. This may in turn have an effect on your next interaction with a
colleague or client.
Examples of Cause and Effect in Sentences
Cause and effect sentences show a clear, direct relationship between events. They show how
one event or action triggers an outcome. They may also show how an effect has more than one
cause, or a cause has more than one effect.
Cause and effect sentences can present the cause first and follow it with the effect, or present
the effect first and follow it with the cause.
• I ate tons of junk food, so now I feel sick.
• I feel sick because I ate tons of junk food.
These sentences have the same cause and effect presented in a different order. These sentences
share the same meaning and show the same relationship.
In the next five sentences, determine which comes first, the cause or the effect.
• He lied to me, so I ended our relationship.
• Since I was up all night with my sick child, I’m exhausted this morning.
• She never gave up on her writing, and now she’s published a book!
• They could finish the race because they had trained for it so diligently.
• They gave the restaurant a critical review because their food was burnt to a crisp.
In the first three sentences, the cause comes first. In sentences four and five, the effect comes
first.
Cause and Effect Relationship Examples
Cause and effect relationships exist in just about every subject area.
History
We can see the causes of local, national, or global events, and the effects of those events. We
can ask, “What were the causes of World War II?” and then “What were the effects of World
War II?”
We can examine what caused an economic recession or depression and the effects of that crisis
on society.
In these cases, as with many others, there are multiple causes and multiple effects.
Science
In 2020, the world was hit with a global pandemic. Scientists saw the effects of the disease on
people’s health and lives and began searching for the cause of the virus.
As the story goes, Sir Isaac Newton observed an effect, an apple falling from a tree. This
prompted him to seek the cause of that fall—why did the apple fall down, not sideways or up?
His observation of that effect led him to discover the cause: gravity.
When conducting experiments, scientists perform an action (cause) to see what will happen as
a result (effect).
Most of us probably had to do an experiment with plants in school. We examined what
happened to our two plants (effects) depending on whether we gave or withheld from them
proper light and water (cause).
The Natural World
Nature is full of examples of cause and effect.
• Plants grow as a result of the sun’s heat and light.
• Bearshibernate so they can conserve energy and won’t require food during the winter
months when food is scarce.
• The moon’s gravitational pull causes the ocean’s tides.
Story
Narrative stories, both fiction and non-fiction, are often driven by cause and effect.
In F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby, Gatsby bases all of his action on pleasing Daisy
because he is obsessed with winning her love.
Daily Life
Our everyday lives are full of cause and effect experiences.
• As a result of studying hard, you aced your test!
• You called in sick because you woke up with a fever.
• You meet friends for drinks because it’s your birthday.
Cause and Effect Words
There are words that signal a cause and effect relationship. These words can help readers
recognize the cause and effect structure of a passage, making it easier to comprehend content.
Words that signal a cause include:
Source Root Origin

Seed Bring about Starting Point


Words that signal effect include:
Result Consequence Upshot

Outcome Ramification Reaction


Signal Words in Cause and Effect Sentences
Observe how the signal words communicate the relationship in these cause and effect example
sentences:
• As a result of COVID, many high school students couldn’t experience graduation
ceremonies.
• There was a multi-car accident on the highway, so traffic was at a standstill.
• I’ve started eating a much healthier diet. Consequently, I’ve lost weight and have more
energy.
• Thanks to my caring friends, I recovered from a difficult situation.
• Since the weather was perfect, we spent the entire day outdoors.
• My partner got his dream job 200 miles away from where we currently live. As a result,
we have to sell the home and move.
• His financial hardships are due to his careless spending.
• She campaigned the hardest, therefore she won the vote.
• The doctor’s optimism is the reason for our positive outlook.
• Your sister is several years older than you. Accordingly, she has more responsibility
and independence.
TIP: Observe the sentences that start with cause signal words (As a result, Thanks to, Since).
There are two clauses in those sentences and they are connected by a comma.
The first clause is dependent meaning that it must be attached to an independent clause to make
sense. When left alone, dependent clauses can become sentence fragments which are
grammatically incorrect.
ProWritingAid is a thorough grammar checker that will alert you to any fragments and make
suggestions for revision.
A Final Word on Cause and Effect
A cause and effect relationship is one in which an event generates an outcome. We see these
relationships everywhere: from history to science to nature to literature to daily life!
When you’re reading or writing about cause and effect, look for or use signal words that make
the relationship between the event (cause) and the outcome (effect) clear.

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