English, asked by miljon, 11 months ago

How do you explain any topic to anyone in simple language?

Answers

Answered by irishmelinda2004
1

Answer:

Heya....here’s ur answer

Explanation:

Whether you’re addressing a large crowd or a single person, speaking on any given topic takes confidence, focus, and clarity. The trick to speaking on the spot is structure. If you have a clear layout, you can make remarks on virtually any subject. To speak in public effectively, try to relax, use concise language, and make strong eye contact. Since making impromptu remarks requires improvisation, prepare indirectly by making a daily effort to broaden your knowledge.

1. Ask for a moment to organize your thoughts. In formal speech and debate, you’re allowed a limited amount of time to plan impromptu remarks on an assigned topic. If someone asks you to speak on the spot, tell them you’d like a few minutes to think of what to say and to jot down some notes.

You shouldn’t try to write out your remarks in full. Just jot down a few key words to help you remember your main points.

2. Begin a short speech with a headline statement. If you’re just speaking for 5 minutes or less, introduce your topic with a concise, attention-grabbing summary statement. If you'd like, you can make a joke to break the ice first, but make it quick and ensure it is relevant to the topic. Since your time is limited, you should get to the point sooner rather than later.

Suppose you’re asked to talk about a work project at a company meeting. You might start with a joke to introduce the problem the project addresses: “As a member of the design team, I want to personally thank all engineers present for not staging an all out mutiny due to the ongoing specification problems.”

After breaking the ice, get straight to the point: “We understand your frustrations, and we’ve established new software solutions and pricing protocols to prevent future miscommunications.”

Avoid making jokes like, “Three guys walked into a bar…” Instead, stick with funny or absurd comments that relate to your own personal experience, but keep it brief.

3. Start with a story if you’re making a longer speech. If you’re speaking for 15 or 20 minutes, you have time to grab the audience’s attention with a story related to the topic. The story’s resolution might introduce the problem or topic, or you could start the story in your introduction and conclude it at the end of your speech.

For instance, if your assigned topic is how dogs improve quality of life, you could open with a story about rescuing your pooch.

4. Map out your structure and use it as a guide. List your main points early in your remarks so your audience clearly understands the direction you’re taking them. Additionally, mapping out your structure will help you stay on track for the rest of your speech.

If you’re presenting a school project, you might say, “Despite their friendship and philosophical commonalities, Albert Camus and Jean-Paul Sartre held contrasting ethical views. I’ll start by discussing their similarities, then I’ll explain their quarrel over whether political justice warrants violence.”

For this example, you could spend 1 to 2 minutes on the philosophers’ similarities, a minute or so on each of their ethical stances, and another minute clarifying the differences between their perspectives.

5. Restate your main points at the end of your remarks. After you’ve delivered the body of your remarks, remind your audience of the path you’ve lead them. Commit this formula to memory: “Tell them what you’re going to tell them, tell them, then tell them what you’ve told them.”

You can adapt this structure for any topic, so keep it in mind any time you’re asked to make off the cuff remarks.

Hope it helps u.....

Plz mark the brainliest

Answered by mahveenmohammedi
2

Simply, I will think that I am sharing my views of the topic with someone and just speak on that. If need I will use the 1H&6W formula. Which means to explain any topic we need to clarify the following words for that topic:

How.

What.

Why.

Which.

When.

Where.

Who.

Hope it helps.

And if you like please mark as brainliest answer.


miljon: Thanks for your answer can you justify how to think about "which"?
mahveenmohammedi: It depends on your topic. For example which year, sort.... Etc etc...
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