Respuesta :
It would be letter A - using complete sentences.
By using complete sentences, the speaker will clearly distinguish the content of each point and specify exactly what claims he or she wants to make. For subordination, it's more of the subheadings supporting the ideas under which they are identified. For coordination, this allows the speaker to determine whether same ideas actually correlate with each other. For discreteness, expressing an idea on one outline to avoid overlapping.
By using complete sentences, the speaker will clearly distinguish the content of each point and specify exactly what claims he or she wants to make. For subordination, it's more of the subheadings supporting the ideas under which they are identified. For coordination, this allows the speaker to determine whether same ideas actually correlate with each other. For discreteness, expressing an idea on one outline to avoid overlapping.
It would be letter A - using complete sentences.
By using complete sentences, the speaker will clearly distinguish the content of each point and specify exactly what claims he or she wants to make. For subordination, it's more of the subheadings supporting the ideas under which they are identified. For coordination, this allows the speaker to determine whether same ideas actually correlate with each other. For discreteness, expressing an idea on one outline to avoid overlapping.
By using complete sentences, the speaker will clearly distinguish the content of each point and specify exactly what claims he or she wants to make. For subordination, it's more of the subheadings supporting the ideas under which they are identified. For coordination, this allows the speaker to determine whether same ideas actually correlate with each other. For discreteness, expressing an idea on one outline to avoid overlapping.