Verbs for a debate
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Título del Test:
![]() Verbs for a debate Descripción: most common verbs used in a debate |



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"Many experts "ad? for" a shorter workweek to improve mental health." (To publicly support a particular cause or policy.). "The latest data seems to con? the points made by the previous speaker." (To deny the truth of a statement by asserting the opposite.). "I would like to emph? that without funding, this plan is impossible." (To give special importance or prominence to something.). "This case study serves to ill? the dangers of unregulated AI." (To explain or make something clear using examples.). "I must "object ?" the suggestion that students are less motivated today.". "The opposition ass? that taxes will rise, but they provide no evidence." (To state a fact or belief confidently and forcefully.). "I am willing to "con? " that the initial costs are high, but the long-term gains are greater." (To admit that something is true or valid after first denying it.). "We cannot simply "dis?" the environmental impact as a secondary concern." (To decide that something is not important or worth considering.). "From these statistics, we can "inf" that the policy has failed its primary goal." (To deduce or conclude information from evidence rather than explicit statements.). "Let me rei? my main point: education is a right, not a privilege." (To say something again or a number of times, typically for emphasis.). "If we dec? the argument for censorship, we find it is built on fear rather than fact. (To analyze a text or argument to expose its hidden internal assumptions). "Implementing these strict measures will only serve to exa? existing social tensions. (To make a problem, bad situation, or negative feeling worse). "The speaker pos? that human nature is inherently selfish, a premise I find flawed." (To suggest or assume the existence of something as a basis for reasoning). "The evidence I have presented today is sufficient to "ref..." the claim that the economy is shrinking." (To prove a statement or theory to be wrong or false; to disprove.). "The researcher was unable to sub? her claims with peer-reviewed data." (To provide evidence to support or prove the truth of something.). |





