The <p> tag is for paragraphs. Paragraphs just like this one! This is an example paragraph.
Here's how you use STRONG text.
And here's how you use emphasized text.
Here is bolded text. Here is italicized text.
This is crossed out text.
Block quote. Cat Ipsum:
Attack feet behind the couch destroy couch flop over give attitude hide when guests come over hopped up on goofballs hunt anything that moves intrigued by the shower, all of a sudden go crazy need to chase tail why must they do that chew ipad power cord sweet beast under the bed swat at dog.
Here is some spoiler text.
And this is the text within toggleable text!!!
Block quote. Cat Ipsum:
Attack feet behind the couch destroy couch flop over give attitude hide when guests come over hopped up on goofballs hunt anything that moves intrigued by the shower, all of a sudden go crazy need to chase tail why must they do that chew ipad power cord sweet beast under the bed swat at dog.
Ahhh, back to a regular paragraph. All of that italicized text was making me a bit hoarse.
Wow, that image is smaller and aligned to the right. This text is flowing around it!
Oh, I see... we added two classes to it... small and right! Marina must have set special styles in the CSS file for images with the small and right classes. Goodness gracious, what will she think of next?
You might be confused if you're viewing this on a phone. When the screen gets really small, then the small class images just revert to taking up the whole width (responsive design). Otherwise they'd just be too ridiculously small! But I bet if you rotate your phone to wide view, you'll be able to see the effects of the small and right classes on images...
Hmmm... there's something strange about this image...
Yikes! It's a link!! I guess you can put an <img> tag inside an <a> tag to create an image link!
If you've been following along inside the HTML editor, you might be wondering, what are all those weird codes with stuff in-between & and ;? Those are called escape characters. < means "less than" symbol and > means "greater than" symbol. Those symbols are used in HTML tags. But if I try to write actual HTML tags to talk to you about them, then the computer will get confused. So somtimes we need to speak, quite literally, in code, to get around this. Maybe you are like... a math blogger so I thought I'd just let you know ahead of time. If you get unexpected results, check back over your writing. You might have typed something that to a human is normal but to a computer is confusing!