Language (Quill)
Email/Word Processing
Literary Terms
Rhetoric
Animal Farm
100

You use this word when you want to conjoin the words "they" and "are"

They're

100

This line informs the recipient about what the email is about

Subject line

100

Two unalike things being directly compared using like or as

Simile

100

An appeal to emotion

Pathos

100

The character from Animal Farm that is known for being loud and talkative

Squealer
200

Two/Too/To: This one is another word for "also" 

Too

200

The line you put an email address of someone that you want to read the email, but don’t necessarily need a response from 

CC line

200

A word, person, object, or situation represents something else.

Symbol

200

An appeal to credibility

Ethos
200

The historical backdrop of Animal Farm is this major time in history

Russian Revolution

300

The first letter of a proper noun needs this

Capitalization

300

Every email should start with one of these

A greeting

300

A word or a phrase that brings to the reader’s mind a sensory experience

Imagery

300

An appeal to logic

Logos

300

The animals blindly trust the pigs because they can't do this

Read/write

400

The type of noun that shows ownership

Possessive nouns

400

These two keys paste information that you have already copied

Ctrl + V

400

The author's universal message regarding a topic

Theme

400

When a speaker/writer says the same thing multiple times for a dramatic effect

Repetition

400

This type of propaganda is being used when companies get a celebrity to be in their advertisement

Testimonial

500

The type of punctuation needed at the end of possessive nouns

An apostrophe
500

The conclusion of an email should include one of these

A signature

500

The type of irony when something happens that is the opposite of what is expected

Situational irony

500

A question asked to make a point rather than to get an answer

Rhetorical question

500

Napoleon symbolized this historical figure

Joseph Stalin

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