Answer: This argument has Some merits but it also has some logical errors that undermines its reasoning and conclusion.
Explanation:
(1) IT FAILED TO GIVE THE TOTAL POPULATION OF WORKERS FROM WHERE THE SAMPLE(1200 PEOPLE) WERE DERIVED AND WHAT SAMPLING METHOD WAS USED: This is a logical error, sampling has to be in RELATION TO THE POPULATION.The sampling method should have been defined.Samples may have been taken from a given A CLASS OF WORKERS.
(2) IT SHOULD HAVE GIVEN CLEARER AND OTHER CHOICES RELATED TO MANAGEMENT ISSUES: It should have made more choices of questions about management issues so that a BROAD, ELABORATE, REASONABLE,ACCURATE AND CONVINCING conclusion will be arrived at.
Okay. Simply make a story with the negative pre-fixes of the words you put in as your answers.
"I fumbled with the keys, determined to unlock the stubborn door, and when I finally did, I walked inside, letting out a sigh of relief. I dropped the keys on the nearest table, and headed upstairs, my footsteps thumping on the wooden staircase. I gently unwrapped the wool sweater from my shoulders, sighing gently, thinking of all the things left to do. Three of my luggages, all filled to the brim, waited in the garage, and I had to unpack them, but I had little to no effort left in me. Sadness clouded my mind. I hated feeling pathetic, and letting myself feel pathetic, but—I just felt so unlucky.
Shaking away the feeling, I took a look around the my best friend's room. Barbara's room was untidy, her clothes, pillows, and books strewn everywhere carelessly. I couldn't help but feel uncertain as I hung my sweater on a nearby chair and headed towards her, a sad little heap on her bed."
How does this sound?
Answer:
The three men agree to think further about the matter, and when Casca and Brutus have gone, Cassius in a brief soliloquy indicates his plans to secure Brutus firmly for the conspiracy that he is planning against Caesar. Unrest is possible in Rome because the new leader is weak.
<span>"In the 1840s the Duchess of Bedford introduces the ritual of afternoon tea, because by this time dinner had become so late, seven-thirty to eight o'clock . . ."</span>