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> the structure of a persuasive essay is a non-fancy, workaday model that works just fine.

I agree with this, but would like to point out that grey-area's point was that there are other forms which fit other uses:

> There are various ways of structuring an argument - as a dialogue, as thesis, antithesis then synthesis, or treating it as an oration like Cicero's with 6 parts ending in a peroration.

The five-paragraph comp works very well for a standard argument.

Anything that doesn't fit the thesis requirement, like a list or synthesis, might not do so well with that format.



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