Third speaker of affirmative:
1. Speaks after second Negative.
2. Concludes argument of Affirmative team.
3. Rebuts arguements of second Negative and whole Negative team.
4. Summarises whole argument of Affirmative team.
Third speaker of negative:
1. Speaks after third affirmative.
2. Stresses main points of negative argument. (Cannot raise any new points)
3. Rebuts arguements of third affirmative, and whole affirmative team.
4. Summarises whole argument of Negative team.
I hope this helps (-:
what is this debate is about.
As the third speaker in a debate, you should begin by summarizing the key arguments made by your team so far. Then, introduce new points or rebuttals to strengthen your team's position. Focus on highlighting the most persuasive points and responding effectively to the opposing arguments. Conclude with a powerful closing statement that reinforces your team's position.
When debating, the announcer/timekeeper introduces the two groups (proposition and opposition) as well as the first, second, third and reply speakers on the team. E.g. From Team Opposition, we have Mary Jane as the first speaker, Kate Spade as the second speaker and Coco Chanel as the third speaker. Kate Spade will also be giving the reply speech.
In the UK he is called the Speaker of the House of Commons.
to debate proposed legislation
Well the first speeker says what the second and third speeker will say (egs thay will back up the statment ......,...... and will add to the argument)then you add your argument
The Speaker of the House Of the two positions, the Speaker of the House is by far the more important and more powerful within the halls of Congress. This is particularly so because the Speaker is both the slected presiding officer of the House amd the acknowledged leader of its majority party.
The speaker can limit the time.
In some debate forums, the speaker holds the floor (dominates the debate) until s/he stops speaking. When a speaker decides to jam the debate to prevent it from concluding they can continue to talk endlessly. They can read the newspaper, a book, the telephone book, anything. in order to never stop talking. That's a filibuster, they are filibustering the debate. The most common place this occurs in the U.S. Congress.
the speaker of the house of representatives
There is no jack that would allow it to be connected to a third party speaker system.
Romney