conclusion
Dorothy Collins Alyea has written: 'All my argument'
Fulton Henry Anderson has written: 'The argument of Plato'
William L. Northridge has written: 'The argument from design'
Joseph Valentinetti has written: 'Restless for Argument' 'Kill Me Tender'
A situation that would benefit from a written argument is when presenting a case in a court of law, where a well-structured and persuasive written argument can help support legal reasoning and advocate for a particular outcome effectively. The clarity and organization of a written argument can also be beneficial in academic settings, such as when writing research papers or essays to defend a thesis or hypothesis.
O. C. Jensen has written: 'The nature of legal argument'
Gary Robert Richmond has written: 'An argument of things unseen'
Marcia K. Hermansen has written: 'The Conclusive Argument from God'
It depends on the context. You can either say, "everything you have written" or "everything you wrote". However, "everything you have wrote" is wrong in any context.
Trudy Govier has written: 'A Practical Study of Argument, 5th ed' 'Socrates' Children' 'A practical study of argument' 'Taking Wrongs Seriously' 'The Philosophy of Argument (Studies in Critical Thinking & Informal Logic, Vol. 3)' 'Selected Issues in Logic and Communication'
A. R. Knudson has written: 'Tables of spherical Hankel functions of imaginary argument'
Henry Dodwell has written: 'Christianity not founded on argument' -- subject(s): Deism