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Page 1: Concluding Statement Word of the Week. Definition O A concluding statement is... O the conclusion reached concerning the thesis of the essay O based on.

Concluding Statement

Word of the Week

Page 2: Concluding Statement Word of the Week. Definition O A concluding statement is... O the conclusion reached concerning the thesis of the essay O based on.

DefinitionO A concluding statement is . . .

O the conclusion reached concerning the thesis of the essay

O based on the facts, observations, and evidence presented.

O When writers restate their main point at the end of essay

O The final rephrasing of the thesis

O Also conclusion

Page 3: Concluding Statement Word of the Week. Definition O A concluding statement is... O the conclusion reached concerning the thesis of the essay O based on.

Concluding statement

OSynonyms:O wrapping up an essayO recapitulation of the main topic

OAntonyms: O a supporting detailO inconclusiveO leaving readers hanging

Page 4: Concluding Statement Word of the Week. Definition O A concluding statement is... O the conclusion reached concerning the thesis of the essay O based on.

Concluding statement

O Which part of this burger would contain a concluding statement?

Page 5: Concluding Statement Word of the Week. Definition O A concluding statement is... O the conclusion reached concerning the thesis of the essay O based on.

Concluding statement

If your essay lacks a closing statement, then it does not have enough structure. Rephrase your main point in a new and creative way!

Page 6: Concluding Statement Word of the Week. Definition O A concluding statement is... O the conclusion reached concerning the thesis of the essay O based on.

Concluding statementO Lawyers end a trial with a concluding

statement to sway the judge and jury’s decision.

Page 7: Concluding Statement Word of the Week. Definition O A concluding statement is... O the conclusion reached concerning the thesis of the essay O based on.

Concluding statementO Concluding statements are useful . . .

O when leaving our reader with a powerful restatement of the thesis (main idea)

O to lawyers who want to influence jurors to believe their case

O for readers to understand the main message of a passage


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