A sound argument anticipates opposing viewpoints and acknowledges, accommodates, and or
refutes them - Answers True
Of the many arguments we hear and read, most of them are convincing - Answers True
Assumption is an idea or principle the writer accepts as true and makes no effort to prove -
Answers True
When writing for agreeing audiences you should concentrate on reinforcing your shared
viewpoint - Answers False
The most familiar deductive argument consists of two premises and a conclusion - Answers
True
When you use inductive reasoning, you make an inference or guess about the cases that you
have not experience - Answers True
When you refute an opposing viewpoint, you demonstrate the weakness of the opponent's
argument - Answers True
When you accommodate an opposing viewpoint, you acknowledge readers' concerns, accept
some of them and incorporate them into your own argument - Answers True
Emotional appeals are directed towards readers' needs and values - Answers True
The conclusion of an argument essay should include all three of the following: Restatement of
claim, Final appeal to needs or values, urges readers to take action - Answers True
Writers use more than just a list of sensory details when describing - Answers True
Description uses comparison to help readers experience what they are writing about - Answers
True
Sensory details appeal to one or more of the five senses - Answers True
Appealing to the senses in writing, helps the readers experience the object, sensation, event, or
person you describe - Answers True
An effective description leaves the reader with a dominant impression. You may describe
something emphasizing a characteristic that will convey a dominant impression - Answers True
Narration Relates a series of events real or imaginary in an organized sequence. It is a story that
makes a point - Answers True
Narratives create a sense of shared history, but not linking people together - Answers False