Argumentative writing, also called argumentative writing, is a style of analyzing things, discussing things, expressing opinions and putting forward opinions. By presenting facts, reasoning and distinguishing right from wrong, the author can determine whether his point of view is right or wrong, and establish or deny a proposition. Argumentative writing should have clear thinking, sufficient arguments, concise language, reasonable arguments and strict logic.
Lyric prose is defined as follows:
Lyric prose takes the expression of subjective feelings as the starting point, is good at ethereal and elegant, and focuses on the accurate use of language to express emotional color. The biggest feature is that "the shape is scattered but the spirit is not scattered." Subjective feelings are often expressed by concretization and scenery writing. The scenery or objects in the text are the support of the author's lyric. Authors often concretize the emotions they want to express, using metaphors, symbols, personification and other techniques, or writing scenes to express their feelings, or blending scenes, or supporting things to achieve the purpose of expressing feelings.
To sum up, argumentative writing focuses on reasoning and deliberation, while lyric prose focuses on expressing emotions. The writing and content of the two are very different.