IDENTIFY
EXPLAIN
NAME
APPEALS
VOCAB
100

“Everyone is doing it, so you should too.”

Bandwagon

100

Why is bandwagon weak?

Relies on popularity, not evidence.
👉 Popular ≠ correct 

100

This fallacy attacks the person instead of the argument.

Ad Hominem

100

This persuasive appeal builds trust and credibility.

Ethos

100

A public message meant to persuade people about an issue.

PSA (Public Service Announcement)

200

“You’re wrong because you’re lazy.”

Ad Hominem

200

Why is ad hominem flawed?

Attacks person

200

This fallacy says something is true because “everyone else believes it.”

Bandwagon

200

This persuasive appeal uses emotions such as fear, sadness, or excitement.

Pathos

200

A candidate’s ideas and plans

Platform

300

“If we allow one late assignment, soon students will stop turning in work entirely.”

Slippery Slope

300

Why is false dilemma misleading?

Too few choices

300

This fallacy presents only two choices when more options exist.

False Dilemma

300

This persuasive appeal relies on facts, evidence, and statistics.

Logos

300

Credibility

Being trustworthy

400

“You either agree or you don’t care.”

False Dilemma

400

Why is slippery slope unrealistic?

Exaggerates outcomes

400

This fallacy exaggerates or misrepresents someone’s argument to make it easier to attack.

Straw Man

400

A commercial shows sad animals to encourage donations. Which appeal is being used?
 

Pathos

400

 Bias

Favoring one side

500

“My grandfather smoked every day and lived to 90, so smoking isn’t dangerous.”

Hasty Generalization

500

Why is hasty generalization unreliable?

Not enough evidence

500

“Freedom” is used in two different ways during an argument to confuse listeners. Which fallacy is it? 

Equivocation 

500

A scientist presenting research data is mainly using this appeal.

Logos

500

Why are logical fallacies persuasive even when they are weak in reasoning?

Because they appeal to emotions, assumptions, or biases and can sound convincing without strong reasoning.

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