How Does 1 Arguments Work?

One argument is like telling someone exactly what to do with just one clear instruction, no confusion, no guesswork!

Imagine you have a toy robot that follows your commands. If you say "Go forward," it moves straight ahead. That’s one argument, just one simple command.

Now picture this: You're baking cookies, and the recipe says "Add sugar." That's like an argument too, it tells your cookie-making process exactly what to do next. No need for extra details or guesswork.

Like a Simple Message

Think of arguments as messages that tell something else what to do. When you use one argument, you're sending just one message, clear and direct. It’s like writing a note that says "Eat the apple." The receiver doesn’t need to figure out anything else, they just follow the instruction.

If you had more than one argument, it would be like saying "Eat the apple and drink water," which is two separate messages. But with just one, everything is simple and easy!

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Examples

  1. A student uses one strong point to win a classroom debate.
  2. A lawyer highlights one key fact to sway the jury.
  3. A friend convinces another with just one good reason.

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Categories: Science · argument· debate· logic