ログイン

ELA Unit 3 Vocab
37問 • 1年前
  • Swara Kavishwar
  • 通報

    問題一覧

  • 1

    One or two sided issue and supports it with the reasons and evidence in order to attempt to insight a person to take action or to change in opinion or belief

    argument

  • 2

    The authors, main reason for writing persuade information entertain, or reflect

    Authors purpose

  • 3

    The quality of being trusted

    Credibility

  • 4

    The perspective or altitude to where the topic and author reveals in their writing

    Authors point of view

  • 5

    The way the writer puts words together based on their connotation or denotation. It is part of the writer style and can be described as formal informal plan, fancy ordinary, technical sophisticated down to earth, old-fashioned or modern.

    Diction/word choice

  • 6

    The side of an issue that the writer favors. Words with extremely positive or negative connotations are often a signal.

    Bias

  • 7

    The main idea or most important point in the whole text

    Central idea

  • 8

    A short and clear Description of the main ideas of a text, film or presentation given without bias or evaluation

    Objective summary

  • 9

    In an argument, it is the writer’s position on an issue or problem. It can be referred to as their conclusion on the topic. Typically in an argument, there is just one that is focused on, but sometimes there can be more than one.

    Claim

  • 10

    Also Known as a pre-or support. The author uses this to support and show that the claim or conclusion is true

    evidence

  • 11

    Supporting information that is directly stated in the text

    Explicit evidence

  • 12

    Supporting information that is not stated directly in the text, but the reader understands it because of clues in the text or previous knowledge

    Implicit evidence

  • 13

    Information that supports and connects to a claim best and/or the most up-to-date. It can take the form of a fact, connotation, and example a statistic or personal experience.

    Relevant evidence

  • 14

    Information that is consistently good in quality; able to be trusted

    Reliable evidence

  • 15

    Enough or Adequate

    Sufficient

  • 16

    Reasons put forward to a oppose an idea developed in another argument

    Counter argument

  • 17

    Refers to in an attempt to disapprove contradict or argue to overcome an opposing reasoning or evidence by introducing another reasoning and evidence to destroy the effect of the previous one

    Rebuttal

  • 18

    To connect or track an argument, making the connection between the evidence and the claim to establish the validity

    Trace

  • 19

    To examine something carefully often times following steps to judge how well the reasons/claim and evidence go together or the validity and soundness

    Logical reasoning

  • 20

    Uses examples or observations to arrive at a conclusion (claim) (Specific to General. Plausibility

    Inductive reasoning

  • 21

    The process of making a logical argument by applying facts, rules, definitions, or properties to arrive at a conclusion (claim) (General to Specifc) Certainty

    Deductive reasoning

  • 22

    Used to describe an argument and the chain of reasoning that connects the claim and evidence to determine if it is logical if a conclusion is true then all of the supporting premises must be “true”, but it doesn’t actually have to be true

    Validity

  • 23

    Used to describe the whole argument in that is logical and factual/true. If the evidence is true, then the claim that comes from it is true.

    Sound

  • 24

    To examine something carefully and to judge, is value worth or trueness

    Evaluate

  • 25

    Appeal to reason; uses facts and statistics to create a sense of logic

    Logos

  • 26

    Appeal to authority; uses the statements of experts are credible people

    Ethos

  • 27

    Common errors in reasoning that will undermine/weaken and argument or tricks used to manipulate or deceived

    Logical fallacy

  • 28

    Appeal to emotion; uses words and images that create strong feelings

    Pathos

  • 29

    The art of creating an argument that not only uses logic, but also the viewers emotions in order to attempt to insight a person to take action or to change and opinion or belief

    Persuasion

  • 30

    Information especially of a biased or misleading nature used to promote or publicize, a particular political cause or point of view

    Propaganda

  • 31

    An appeal that presents what most people or a group of people think in order to persuade one to think the same way

    Bandwagon

  • 32

    Making assumptions about a whole group or a range of cases based on a sample that is inadequate

    hasty-over- generalization

  • 33

    Focusing the attention on people rather than on arguments or evidence

    AD Hominem

  • 34

    Intentionally failing to use information suspected of being relevant and significant

    Cherry - picking

  • 35

    Someone claims that a first step will probably lead to a second step that intern will probably lead to another step and so on until the final step ends in trouble

    Slippery slope

  • 36

    Raising a side issue that distracts the audience from what’s really at stake. Often the argument were never returned to the original issue.

    Red herring

  • 37

    The authors attitude towards the topic displayed through their choice of evidence and words

    Tone

  • Prefix Suffix and Variables Quiz

    Prefix Suffix and Variables Quiz

    Swara Kavishwar · 23問 · 1年前

    Prefix Suffix and Variables Quiz

    Prefix Suffix and Variables Quiz

    23問 • 1年前
    Swara Kavishwar

    Goverment Vocab Quiz

    Goverment Vocab Quiz

    Swara Kavishwar · 29問 · 1年前

    Goverment Vocab Quiz

    Goverment Vocab Quiz

    29問 • 1年前
    Swara Kavishwar

    ELA unit 2 vocab quiz

    ELA unit 2 vocab quiz

    Swara Kavishwar · 26問 · 1年前

    ELA unit 2 vocab quiz

    ELA unit 2 vocab quiz

    26問 • 1年前
    Swara Kavishwar

    Science Body Book pt 2

    Science Body Book pt 2

    Swara Kavishwar · 53問 · 1年前

    Science Body Book pt 2

    Science Body Book pt 2

    53問 • 1年前
    Swara Kavishwar

    Drama vocab

    Drama vocab

    Swara Kavishwar · 14問 · 1年前

    Drama vocab

    Drama vocab

    14問 • 1年前
    Swara Kavishwar

    問題一覧

  • 1

    One or two sided issue and supports it with the reasons and evidence in order to attempt to insight a person to take action or to change in opinion or belief

    argument

  • 2

    The authors, main reason for writing persuade information entertain, or reflect

    Authors purpose

  • 3

    The quality of being trusted

    Credibility

  • 4

    The perspective or altitude to where the topic and author reveals in their writing

    Authors point of view

  • 5

    The way the writer puts words together based on their connotation or denotation. It is part of the writer style and can be described as formal informal plan, fancy ordinary, technical sophisticated down to earth, old-fashioned or modern.

    Diction/word choice

  • 6

    The side of an issue that the writer favors. Words with extremely positive or negative connotations are often a signal.

    Bias

  • 7

    The main idea or most important point in the whole text

    Central idea

  • 8

    A short and clear Description of the main ideas of a text, film or presentation given without bias or evaluation

    Objective summary

  • 9

    In an argument, it is the writer’s position on an issue or problem. It can be referred to as their conclusion on the topic. Typically in an argument, there is just one that is focused on, but sometimes there can be more than one.

    Claim

  • 10

    Also Known as a pre-or support. The author uses this to support and show that the claim or conclusion is true

    evidence

  • 11

    Supporting information that is directly stated in the text

    Explicit evidence

  • 12

    Supporting information that is not stated directly in the text, but the reader understands it because of clues in the text or previous knowledge

    Implicit evidence

  • 13

    Information that supports and connects to a claim best and/or the most up-to-date. It can take the form of a fact, connotation, and example a statistic or personal experience.

    Relevant evidence

  • 14

    Information that is consistently good in quality; able to be trusted

    Reliable evidence

  • 15

    Enough or Adequate

    Sufficient

  • 16

    Reasons put forward to a oppose an idea developed in another argument

    Counter argument

  • 17

    Refers to in an attempt to disapprove contradict or argue to overcome an opposing reasoning or evidence by introducing another reasoning and evidence to destroy the effect of the previous one

    Rebuttal

  • 18

    To connect or track an argument, making the connection between the evidence and the claim to establish the validity

    Trace

  • 19

    To examine something carefully often times following steps to judge how well the reasons/claim and evidence go together or the validity and soundness

    Logical reasoning

  • 20

    Uses examples or observations to arrive at a conclusion (claim) (Specific to General. Plausibility

    Inductive reasoning

  • 21

    The process of making a logical argument by applying facts, rules, definitions, or properties to arrive at a conclusion (claim) (General to Specifc) Certainty

    Deductive reasoning

  • 22

    Used to describe an argument and the chain of reasoning that connects the claim and evidence to determine if it is logical if a conclusion is true then all of the supporting premises must be “true”, but it doesn’t actually have to be true

    Validity

  • 23

    Used to describe the whole argument in that is logical and factual/true. If the evidence is true, then the claim that comes from it is true.

    Sound

  • 24

    To examine something carefully and to judge, is value worth or trueness

    Evaluate

  • 25

    Appeal to reason; uses facts and statistics to create a sense of logic

    Logos

  • 26

    Appeal to authority; uses the statements of experts are credible people

    Ethos

  • 27

    Common errors in reasoning that will undermine/weaken and argument or tricks used to manipulate or deceived

    Logical fallacy

  • 28

    Appeal to emotion; uses words and images that create strong feelings

    Pathos

  • 29

    The art of creating an argument that not only uses logic, but also the viewers emotions in order to attempt to insight a person to take action or to change and opinion or belief

    Persuasion

  • 30

    Information especially of a biased or misleading nature used to promote or publicize, a particular political cause or point of view

    Propaganda

  • 31

    An appeal that presents what most people or a group of people think in order to persuade one to think the same way

    Bandwagon

  • 32

    Making assumptions about a whole group or a range of cases based on a sample that is inadequate

    hasty-over- generalization

  • 33

    Focusing the attention on people rather than on arguments or evidence

    AD Hominem

  • 34

    Intentionally failing to use information suspected of being relevant and significant

    Cherry - picking

  • 35

    Someone claims that a first step will probably lead to a second step that intern will probably lead to another step and so on until the final step ends in trouble

    Slippery slope

  • 36

    Raising a side issue that distracts the audience from what’s really at stake. Often the argument were never returned to the original issue.

    Red herring

  • 37

    The authors attitude towards the topic displayed through their choice of evidence and words

    Tone