EASY
CAT
IMPORTANT
Earn 100

Rearrange the following sentences in a logical order to form a coherent paragraph.

(A) If my husband, Ed, had his way, you could pop by our place any given night and see me sitting in bed, struggling to hold my head up under the weight of a night-vision headset.
(B) Ed is an early-to-sleep sort of chap, who'll announce around 8 pm “just going to change into my pyjamas and read for a while."
(C) Once he becomes horizontal, however, it's pretty much over.
(D) This makes it difficult for yours truly, for I really do read in bed, including the part where you turn the page and read a second one and then the third one.

50% studentsanswered this correctly

Important Questions on Paragraph Jumbles

EASY
CAT
IMPORTANT

Rearrange the following sentences in a logical order to form a coherent paragraph.

(A) We call it Pillow Mountain.
(B) I roll over in the middle of the night and find myself suffocating against a towering mound of goose down.
(C) I offered to stop eating in bed if Ed would agree to wean himself from his need for multiple pillows.
(D) A married couple can best be defined as a unit of people whose sleep habits are carefully engineered to keep each other awake.

EASY
CAT
IMPORTANT

Directions: Rearrange the following sentences in a logical order to form a coherent paragraph.

(A) It's that rare state when it seems you can do no wrong.
(B) You know the feeling.
(C) Maybe you're playing tennis and every shot is landing right where you aim it.
(D) Or perhaps solutions to those gnarly work problems are coming to you so easily that you wonder why they seemed insurmountable before.
(E) Why is it that sometimes you fire on all cylinders and at other times you can't even start the engine?
(F) For most of us, these moments of vision and high performance are too rare.
(G) The answer may be this: You're at your best when you get your mind out of the way.

EASY
CAT
IMPORTANT

Rearrange the following sentences in a logical order to form a coherent paragraph.

(A) Every bit of his well-muscled arms is covered with tattoos.
(B) Today Kent Lindahl is the father of two children, has finished college, and is working towards a degree in psychotherapy.
(C) Yet fragments of his past will always haunt him.
(D) With his intelligent eyes, neatly trimmed beard and wire-rimmed glasses, Lindahl looks like a professor until he rolls up his sleeves.

EASY
CAT
IMPORTANT

Rearrange the following sentences in a logical order to form a coherent paragraph.

(A) Amberry teaches professional basketball players how to shoot free throws and has produced an instructional book and video.
(B) The key, he says, is to become mentally absorbed in a physical routine, which clears the head of negative ideas, such as missing the shot.
(C) "You can't have an extraneous thought in your mind when you make that free throw," says Amberry.
(D) Refocusing the mind to eliminate the buzz and the static of everyday thought, according to a new book by Dr Herbert Benson, has powers beyond the basketball court.

EASY
CAT
IMPORTANT

Rearrange the following sentences in a logical order to form a coherent paragraph.

(A) So she took her dog, Elsie Mae, for a stroll on the beach near her home in California.
(B) Of course, some people seem to know intuitively that the best way to cope with a problem can be to walk away from it.
(C) Artist and graphic designer Lisa Gizara, 43, was struggling to come up with a fresh advertising idea for one of her clients, a computer company.
(D) She took a few more steps and saw an image: Michelangelo's "Creations of Adam," which features the famous detail of God's and Adam's fingers nearly touching.
(E) As they tromped across the sand, suddenly a phrase popped into Gizara's head: "Get connected."

EASY
CAT
IMPORTANT

Rearrange the following sentences in a logical order to form a coherent paragraph.

(A) Benson believes that when you "break the train of everyday thought"- a phrase he repeats like a mantra-your body increases the production of a gas molecule called nitric oxide (not to be confused with nitrous oxide, or laughing gas).
(B) Scientists once thought nitric oxide, or NO, was merely a toxin.
(C) It's a component of cigarette smoke, for example.
(D) But in the late 1980s, researchers learned that gas is made in the human body and plays a role in a range of physiological processes, such as controlling blood pressure.

EASY
CAT
IMPORTANT

Rearrange the following sentences in a logical order to form a coherent paragraph.

(A) Many of his colleagues told him he was wasting his time and would ruin his career.
(B) But Benson went on to become a pioneer in the now-nourishing field known as mind-body medicine, which explores how our thoughts and feelings contribute to disease.
(C) Benson has grown accustomed to skepticism about his work.
(D) Trained as a cardiologist at Harvard Medical School, Benson began in the 1960s to study how stress affects physical well being, then considered a radical idea.

EASY
CAT
IMPORTANT

Directions: Rearrange the following sentences in a logical order to form a coherent paragraph.

(A) To the soundtrack of cicadas and the wind in the leaves, Abrams repeated the motions, over and over, until her brain and body went on autopilot.
(B) "It's a very Zen kind of thing."
(C) She would sit in the night air for hours, slowly rocking the treadle of a spinning wheel with her feet and guiding the fibers with sweeping motions of her arm.
(D) Consider Charlene Abrams, who spent every free evening in the summer of 1994 on the front step of her home, spinning yarn.
(E) "You get into this almost altered state," says Abrams, 43, a software engineer.
(F) "Sitting there spinning, my mind wanders and goes wherever it needs to go."