I. Introduction
A.Sentence that will grab your readers' attention:
B. Start your essay with a compelling hook or an intriguing fact or statistic that is linked to your topic.
B.One-sentence thesis statement:
Indicate your essay's key argument or thesis in a clear and concise manner.
II. Body
A.First main idea:
1. Evidence in favour of the first proposition:
II. Body
A.First main idea:
1. Evidence in favour of the first proposition:
Provide relevant data, case studies, or research to back up your opening thesis.
2. Proof in favour of the first proposition:
To support your first major point, offer other justifications or supporting data.
3. Proof in favour of the initial assertion:
For your initial primary idea, add more justifications or facts.
B.Second main idea:
1. Evidence in favour of the second main idea:
Give instances or proof to support your second primary point.
2. Proof in favour of the second main idea:
Add more supporting data or arguments to the second primary point.
3. Proof in favour of the second main idea:
Give more examples or justifications to support the second basic premise.
C. Third main idea:
1. Evidence in favour of the third main idea:
Give examples or proof to back up your third main point.
2. Proof in favour of the third main idea:
Describe the third basic notion in more detail using supporting data or arguments.
3. Proof in favour of the third main idea:
Give more examples or justifications to support the third basic premise.
III. Conclusion
Reiterating your argument:
Reiterate your thesis statement's primary argument in your summary.
A wise conclusion to your essay:
Finish with a statement that challenges the reader's thinking or has a significant influence.
Source: https://archive.org/details/writingwithpur00mccr/page/n9/mode/2up