relating to or arranged according to the order of time
Writers of arguments can choose from a number of organizational structures, including compare-contrast, order of importance, problem solution, cause-effect, and chronological (or sequential) order, among others.
Writers of arguments can choose from a number of organizational structures, including compare-contrast, order of importance, problem solution, cause-effect, and chronological (or sequential) order, among others.
Writers of arguments can choose from a number of organizational structures, including compare-contrast, order of importance, problem solution, cause-effect, and chronological (or sequential) order, among others.
You should provide evidence that supports your topic sentence. Evidence can include relevant facts, definitions, details, observations, quotations, statistics, and examples.
If a quotation is too long or too complicated, you can paraphrase it—or any of your evidence. Paraphrasing involves restating the key ideas by using your own words.