An appeal to logic and reason.
Logos
The persons reached by a book, radio or television broadcast, etc.; public
Audience
A question that can be argued.
Argument
A quotation from or reference to a book, paper, or author, especially in a scholarly work.
Citation
The quality of being trusted and believed in.
Credibility
An appeal to ethics and credibility.
Ethos
The author's perspective on the topic.
Point-of-View
An opinion stated as fact.
Claim
notes added to a text while participating in active reading.
Annotation
Closely related or appropriate to the matter at hand.
Relevant
An appeal to to emotions.
Pathos
The main idea of a writing; the point the author wants you to remember most.
Central idea
A claim made to rebut a previous claim.
Counterclaim
A conclusion reached on the basis of evidence and reasoning.
Inference
Enough; adequate
Sufficient
The choice and use of words and phrases in speech and writing.
Diction
The author's reason for writing the piece.
Purpose
States clearly and in detail, leaving no room for confusion or doubt.
Explicit
The explicit or direct meaning or set of meanings of a word or expression.
Denotative
A mistaken belief, especially one based on an unsound argument.
Fallacy
The art of effective or persuasive speaking or writing.
Rhetoric
A claim and 3 reasons supporting it.
Thesis
The author's attitude toward a topic.
Tone
Signifying or suggestive of an association or secondary meaning in addition to the primary meaning.
Connotative
Faulty or mistaken logic
Fallacious Reasoning