Asked by tay

Start by clearly defining your topic with a thesis statement.
Remember, your statement should be concise and precise.

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
I can do that — what topic do you want the thesis statement for?

Meanwhile, here’s a concise definition and a few ready-to-use templates and one-sentence examples so you can see the form I’ll use:

Definition (one line)
- A thesis statement is a single, specific sentence that clearly states your central claim and outlines the main reason(s) you will use to support it.

Quick templates (fill with your topic and reason)
- Argumentative: "Although [counterpoint], [your claim] because [reason 1] and [reason 2]."
- Cause/effect: "[X] leads to [Y] by [mechanism A] and [mechanism B]."
- Analytical (literature): "In [work], [author] uses [device(s)] to show [interpretation]."
- Policy: "To [goal], policymakers should [action] because it will [benefit 1] and [benefit 2]."

One-sentence examples
- Argumentative (education): "School start times should shift later because later starts improve adolescent sleep, academic performance, and mental health."
- Cause/effect (environment): "Urban heat islands increase local mortality during heat waves by raising night-time temperatures and limiting cooling opportunities."
- Analytical (literature): "In The Great Gatsby, Fitzgerald uses color imagery and unreliable narration to critique the American Dream’s moral emptiness."
- Policy (public health): "To reduce opioid overdose deaths, cities should expand supervised consumption sites because they lower fatal overdoses and connect users to treatment."
- Expository (technology): "Remote work reshapes workplace productivity by reducing commute time and increasing asynchronous collaboration."

Tell me your topic, audience, and paper type (argument, analysis, policy, etc.), and I’ll craft a concise, precise thesis statement for you.