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kirill [66]
2 years ago
6

How is a literary analysis essay different from an argumentative essay

English
1 answer:
ohaa [14]2 years ago
5 0

Answer:

When you're asked to analyze something, for example a piece of literature, you are being asked to examine and evaluate the work to answer some how or why questions. When you're asked to make an argument, you must investigate a topic, collect, generate and evaluate evidence, then establish a position.

Explanation:

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Greeley [361]

Answer:

In this passage, Willis is expressing that literature is a message from the past telling us about the lives of those before us. We are told that these messages are trying to tell us how we live and how we die based on others experiences. Willis tries to explain this through a concerned, yet passionate tone that urges us, the readers, to learn from the mistakes and the fortunes of the lives of people before us. We can only do this through literature, as it is the gateway to seeing how the world works.

6 0
2 years ago
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According to the article, which of the following
Morgarella [4.7K]
A- this was a womens rights group,
b- they benefited from alcohol and the end of prohibition
c- states?
d- one who supported and introduced
i would say d
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2 years ago
Which of the following sentence is most likely a topic sentence
grin007 [14]

Answer:

A

Explanation:

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2 years ago
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Which word or phrase could best replace either of the underlined words in the paragraph?
strojnjashka [21]
The answer is A. I believe bc a commotion is a very loud disturbance
5 0
3 years ago
Need help!!! will award brainlist! offering 30 points!!!!
S_A_V [24]
Hi there!

It seems you need some essay help.

There is no context provided as to what you learned, so I'm not sure how to help there. Basically, the prompt is asking to write what you learned, using what you learned.

Your essay will be structured like so:

Intro
---
Attention grabber/hook. Sentence leading into what your topic is about, also catching the reader's attention. Thesis statement, your whole paper summed up (first paragraph summed up, second, and third).

First
---
Claim, evidence (with citation), elaboration. Repeated as needed. Finish with sentence claim.

Second
---
Same as first.

Third
---
Same as first.

Conclusion
---
Summed up. Thesis. (optional: leave the reader with a question they have to think about)

Citation page
---
A whole separate page with the requested citation. Ask your teacher for exactly how to do this.

Submit your basic outline, which is basically this above, just with what the topic is about (again, ask your teacher on what they want)

Then, write your paper. Use vocabulary and great sentences. A thesaurus can help you find meaningful words to throw in.

Hope this helps! :)
5 0
3 years ago
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