Answer:
- <u><em>A) a cause and effect argument.</em></u>
Explanation:
The answer choices for this question are:
A) a cause and effect argument.
B) a narrative essay
C) a compare and contrast argument.
D) a chronological persuasive argument.
<h2>Solution</h2>
<em>Arguments</em> of<em> cause and effect </em>are statements, declarations, on the basis that one event (the <em>cause</em>) produces (leads to) the other event (the <em>effect</em>).
For example, if an student gets late to the school and he argues " I am late because we had a car accident on the way to the school", the student is using a <em>cause and effect argument</em>, where "the car accident" is the cause of his delay (the effect).
That way, the student is arguing that it was not his fault; the accident was the cause of his being late. That is a good argument, indeed.