B. quoting, summarizing, paraphrasing, and providing data
In a research paper, evidence is used to support the author's thesis statement or main idea. Evidence is information taken from outside reliable sources to prove that the author's ideas are based in fact and worth paying attention to. Evidence can be a direct quote, a summary of information, a paraphrase, or relevant data. For example a research paper on school violence in Boston might contain a direct quote from a school resource officer, a summary of the worst instances of violence, a paraphrase of information about psychological effects of school shootings, and statistics about the prevalence of violence in schools.
It is important to cite evidence in a research paper by giving credit to the source from which the evidence came. To do this the author must use a works cited page and parenthetical citations. However, while these give credit to the evidence used, they are not a type of evidence.
I think it is a Logical Fallacy but i am not quite sure. Sorry if it is wrong.
Answer:
its b
Explanation:
i put in A and i got it wrong and i had to redo. So i tried B and it worked.
First of all, sweet story ;-; Second of all, the answer is d :)
I would say suspenseful cause engaging has a positive connotation, elaborate does too, and multilevel as well.