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4 May, 10:03

Since an argument requires a conclusion, an argument must claim that some statement follows from reasons or evidence presented in another statement. This property of an argument is known as the argument's. And since an argument requires premises, an argument must claim that at least one statement presents true reasons or evidence for accepting the conclusion. This property of an argument is known as the argument's. Any group of statements that meets these two criteria is an argument.

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  1. 4 May, 12:55
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    inferential claim, factual claim

    Explanation:

    A passage qualifies as an argument if it bears a factual claim and an inferential claim. A factual claim is a claim in the premise if an argument that is assumed to be true and a fact. An inferential claim is a conclusive part of an argument that supports a reasoning process and suggests that something derives from something or is an implication of something.
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