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12, Mar 2019 10:12 PM
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Essay Structure Writing an academic essay means fashioning a coherent set of ideas into an argument. Because essays are essentially linear—they offer one idea at a time—they must present their ideas in the order that makes most sense to a reader. Successfully structuring an essay means attending to a reader's logic. The focus of such an essay predicts its structure. It dictates the information readers need to know and the order in which they need to receive it. Thus your essay's structure is necessarily unique to the main claim you're making. Although there are guidelines for constructing certain classic essay types (e.g., comparative analysis), there are no set formula. Answering Questions: The Parts of an Essay A typical essay contains many different kinds of information, often located in specialized parts or sections. Even short essays perform several different operations: introducing the argument, analyzing data, raising counterarguments, concluding. Introductions and conclusions have fixed places, but other parts don't. Counterargument, for example, may appear within a paragraph, as a free-standing section, as part of the beginning, or before the ending. Background material (historical context or biographical information, a summary of relevant theory or criticism, the definition of a key term) often appears at the beginning of the essay, between the introduction and the first analytical section, but might also appear near the beginning of the specific section to which it's relevant. It's helpful to think of the different essay sections as answering a series of questions your reader might ask when encountering your thesis. (Readers should have questions. If they don't, your thesis is most likely simply an observation of fact, not an arguable claim.) "What?" The first question to anticipate from a reader is "what": What evidence shows that the phenomenon described by your thesis is true? To answer the question you must examine your evidence, thus demonstrating the truth of your claim. This "what" or "demonstration" section comes early in the essay, often directly after the introduction. Since you're essentially reporting what you've observed, this is the part you might have most to say about when you first start writing. But be forewarned: it shouldn't take up much more than a third (often much less) of your finished essay. If it does, the essay will lack balance and may read as mere summary or description.
24, Feb 2020 10:37 AM
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22, Mar 2019 08:47 PM

5 new movie trailers you need to watch from this past week

While you’re waiting for Ant-Man and the Wasp to arrive in cinemas to bridge the gap between Infinity War and the next Avengers movie, there’s a different movie you should check out. Sicario: Day of the Soldado, the sequel to the original Sicario movie, is out this weekend. And considering what they did with the first one, there’s no way I’m not seeing it.

Gesendet  6,557 Ansichten aktualisiert 8 Jahre vor

While you’re waiting for Ant-Man and the Wasp to arrive in cinemas to bridge the gap between Infinity War and the next Avengers movie, there’s a different movie you should check out. Sicario: Day of the Soldado, the sequel to the original Sicario movie, is out this weekend. And considering what they did with the first one, there’s no way I’m not seeing it.

Assassination Nation

Beautiful Boy

Mile 22

The Equalizer 2

The Predator


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