I have to admit that I’ve been guilty of this myself. It’s the only thing I can think of that I can’t do better than “I don’t like it”.
Ive had more than one argumentative essay where my opponent said something like: “Which statement is an example of an effective claim for an argumentative essay?” When I say that statement is the only one that I do like, I mean it in the most basic level. An effective claim is one that appeals to our sense of logic and order. In other words, its a claim that our mind can comprehend and make sense of.
An effective claim is one that is not only believable, but is also backed up with solid evidence. The way I think about this is you can make a claim that will be true but not be backed up with evidence, but the other way around is that its possible to make a claim that will be backed up with evidence, but it wont be true. A good example of an effective claim is where you say something that is true but you dont really have any evidence to back it up.
The way I read this is that you could make a claim that is true, but you dont have any evidence to back it up. I read this as a claim that your own evidence will not support your claim, but you cant back up your claim with any evidence.
Its an example of a claim that you cant really back up without evidence.
This is a good example, because you cant back up without evidence. Even if you have a lot of evidence, you cant actually back up without evidence because you would need to back it up with evidence. This is obviously a bad example because you have no evidence to back up your claim. You cant back up without evidence unless you have evidence to back up your claim.
Sure you can. You just have to have a very good reason for what you claim to be true, like, “I have seen it before, it looks and feels very similar to this.
This is probably the best reason to go for a claim like this. It’s very easy to see how something looks and feels similar to something else, but you would have to have evidence to make this claim. You cant just say, “I have seen it before.” That doesn’t work because it won’t back up what you’re about to say.
This is a very common objection to claims of similarity. It is not an objection to the premise behind the claim, it is an objection to the conclusion. If you have evidence that something looks and feels similar to something else, but you have evidence that something happened, and you have evidence that something happens, then you have a very strong case. To prove that something happened, you need to have more evidence than just the fact that something looks and feels similar to something else.
An example of an effective argumentative essay would be: “According to evidence, the world is round and the Earth is elliptical, so if scientists can find new evidence for this, I will have a better chance of winning The Lottery.