Q: Which of the following statements about arguments, explanations and descriptions are correct?
(A) An argument offers reasons to support the truth of a claim;
(B) An explanation aims to show why a fact is true rather than to establish that it is true;
(C) Mere descriptions present information or narrative without trying to prove or explain;
(D) Any passage containing the word “because” must be treated as an argument and never as an explanation;
(E) In UGC NET reasoning, distinguishing argument, explanation and description helps interpret passages correctly;
Choose the correct answer from the options given below:
Q: Which of the following statements about premises and conclusions in an argument are correct?
(A) In a standard argument, premises are offered as reasons to believe the conclusion;
(B) Indicator words like “because” and “since” often signal premises;
(C) Indicator words like “therefore” and “thus” typically signal conclusions;
(D) Every group of statements containing “because” and “therefore” automatically forms a logically valid argument;
(E) In UGC NET reasoning, distinguishing premises from conclusions helps in evaluating arguments;
(F) A conclusion of an argument can never appear at the beginning of the passage;
Choose the correct answer from the options given below:

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