Q. How can you support textual evidence?
State the idea you had about the text (if you are responding to a specific question, be sure your idea restates the question). Now give supporting evidence from the text. To cite explicitly, paraphrase or use quotes from the text. If you use direct quotes from a text, you must use quotation marks.
Q. Why is your answer the most probable title of the article provide textual evidence to support your answer?
Explanation: because through our answers they will know or they will have an idea about it. Without our answers there’s no content in behind in our article, so that our answer is also probable to be a title of our articles.
Table of Contents
- Q. How can you support textual evidence?
- Q. Why is your answer the most probable title of the article provide textual evidence to support your answer?
- Q. What is strong and thorough textual evidence?
- Q. What are the characteristics of good textual evidences?
- Q. How do you determine strong evidence?
- Q. What are the types of supporting evidence?
- Q. What are the three types of evidence persuasive speeches use?
- Q. What do all persuasive speeches have in common?
- Q. How do you speak confidently in public speech?
Q. What is strong and thorough textual evidence?
11-12.1 Cite strong and thorough textual evidence to support analysis of what the text says explicitly as well as inferences drawn from the text, including determining where the text leaves matters uncertain.
Q. What are the characteristics of good textual evidences?
Good evidence is representative of what is, not just an isolated case, and it is information upon which an institution can take action to improve. It is, in short, relevant, verifiable, representative, and actionable. It is important to note that evidence per se does not lead to confirmations of value and quality.
Q. How do you determine strong evidence?
Strong evidence must meet several criteria….It should be:
- Relevant to the topic of your paper.
- In support of the argument you’re advancing.
- From a credible source.
- Verified by multiple sources.
- Current (in most cases).
- Specific, not general.
Q. What are the types of supporting evidence?
There are four types, to be exact:
- Statistical Evidence.
- Testimonial Evidence.
- Anecdotal Evidence.
- Analogical Evidence.
Q. What are the three types of evidence persuasive speeches use?
There are three kinds of persuasive speeches most often used in the area of beliefs and attitudes. These are speeches of fact, value, and policy. You can argue about what is, what should be, or how it should be. In making any of these kinds of speeches, you make specific claims that you seek to prove to your audience.
Q. What do all persuasive speeches have in common?
Traditionally, persuasion involves ethos (credibility), logos (logic), and pathos (emotion). By performing these three elements competently, a speaker can enhance their persuasive power.
Q. How do you speak confidently in public speech?
To appear confident:
- Maintain eye contact with the audience.
- Use gestures to emphasise points.
- Move around the stage.
- Match facial expressions with what you’re saying.
- Reduce nervous habits.
- Slowly and steadily breathe.
- Use your voice aptly.