Topic > Rhetorical analysis of persuasive speech - 928

The first argument is the sign, it concerns the characteristic or situations that accompany the phenomenon but does not create the statement; in other words the complaint is proof of all the facts that occurred; however, to make an effective argument about signs, a sufficient number of signs is needed and conclusions should be drawn from the signs cited. The second argument is example, examples are used as evidence to support your claim; to have a successful topic, for example, keys are needed, enough examples must be cited, and they must be similar to everyone within the category. Argument analogy is the third type of argument, in this classification the evidence used to support the claim with a single comparable example is significantly similar to the subject of the claim; the argument must have compared subjects who are similar in every important respect, as well as more similarities than differences; Having said that the argument will only be valid if it follows the given descriptions. The last type of argument is causation, this argument supports the claim by citing events that happened as a result of the claim; for this argument to be valid, other events should not be more important in causing the events, and the most important feature of this argument is that the effect should follow the event