Cohesion vs. Coherence: Key Writing Differences Explained

Cohesion is the glue—pronouns, connectors, repeated words—that make sentences stick together. Coherence is the sense: whether the whole passage flows logically and feels complete.

People mix them because both deal with “flow.” A paragraph can be cohesive—full of “however” and “this”—yet incoherent if the ideas don’t add up.

Key Differences

Cohesion = visible stitches. Coherence = the dress fits. One is surface links, the other is underlying logic.

Which One Should You Choose?

Focus on coherence first; a clear storyline beats perfect connectors. Then layer cohesion to polish flow.

Examples and Daily Life

Texting “Got it. Thanks!” shows cohesion (pronoun), coherence (the reply makes sense after your question).

Can a text be coherent without cohesion?

Yes. A list of bullet points without “and” or “therefore” can still feel logical.

How do I test coherence?

Read it aloud; if a friend follows without extra questions, it’s coherent.

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