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The evidence in an argumentative speech should include
a “hook” to attract attention.
an implied thesis statement.
facts, statistics, or examples.
compelling counterclaims.
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Answered by
GPT-5 mini
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facts, statistics, or examples.
Explanation: evidence consists of verifiable support — data, examples, expert testimony, and statistics — that back your claims. A “hook” and thesis are parts of the speech’s introduction/structure, and while you should address counterclaims, those are not the primary form of supporting evidence.
Explanation: evidence consists of verifiable support — data, examples, expert testimony, and statistics — that back your claims. A “hook” and thesis are parts of the speech’s introduction/structure, and while you should address counterclaims, those are not the primary form of supporting evidence.
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