Second, the three elements of argumentative writing: argument, argument and argumentation.
1, argument (what needs to be proved) is a sentence that correctly and clearly expounds the author's point of view, and it is the soul and commander of an article. Any article has only one central argument, and generally there can be sub-arguments.
The argument should be correct, clear and general, which is a complete judgment sentence and cannot be ambiguous:
2. Argumentation (how to prove it) is the process of proving an argument with rigorous arguments.
3. Argument (what to prove) is the material to support the argument and the reason and basis used by the author to prove the argument. It can be divided into factual argument and theoretical argument.
A. factual arguments: representative examples, conclusive data, reliable historical facts, etc. Factual arguments include examples and data.
B. Theoretical arguments: including famous sayings and aphorisms, proverbs and aphorisms, and the author's reasoning analysis.
Requirements for using arguments: ① certainty. ② Typical. (3) the unity of arguments and arguments. The argument is to prove the argument, so the connection between the two should be closely consistent.
The basic structure of argumentative writing;
Asking questions (introduction)-analyzing problems (theory)-solving problems (conclusion)
1. There are generally three structural modes of argumentative writing: parallel, progressive and comparative. (in either case, you should deduct the materials to write. )
Parallel (coherent)
1, juxtaposed (clearly organized, so that reviewers can grasp the full text)