Pathos
Ethos
Logos
Logical Fallacies
Analysis
100

The concept of consistently using words with strong positive or negative connotations.

What is loaded language?

100

Name two of the ways in which an author makes an ethos appeal.

What is [any two of the following]? Claiming credibility, borrowing credibility, common ground, disclosing motives, gravitas.

100

Factual support that may also indicate an appeal to logic.

What are facts and statistics?

100

The fallacy in which an unlikely extreme result is predicted (A -> Z instead of A -> B).

What is slippery slope fallacy?

100

True or false: analysis should contain writer's opinions about a text.

What is true?

200

Another word for anecdote.

What is storytelling or narrative?

200

A way in which loaded language can also affect an author's credibility.

What is by affecting tone (gravitas)?

200

Opinionated support that also may indicate an appeal to logic.

What are logical constructions?

200

The fallacy in which an expert is cited who is not credible on the topic.

What is appeal to (false) authority?

200

True or false: analysis should contain support directly from a text.

What is true?

300

When telling a story, an author includes this type of detail to emotionally appeal to a reader.

What is sensory? (sight, sound, etc.)

300

An example of how an author might claim credibility.

What is through an author bio? (Multiple answers possible).

300

The concept when an author integrates an opposing argument.

What is counterargument?

300

The fallacy in which two options are presented as the only ones when other options may exist.

What is black-and-white/ either-or/ false dilemma fallacy?

300

The part of analysis that typically requires APA in-text citations.

What is support from the text?

400

An author can make a pathos appeals in these two ways.

What is through loaded language or anecdote (storytelling)?

400
An example of a way an author could borrow credibility.

What is by citing an expert opinion? (Multiple answers possible).

400
The two ways an author may respond to a counterargument.

What are concession and refutation?

400

The fallacy in which the conclusion is an unrelated distraction unrelated to the premise.

What is red herring?

400

The part of analysis indicated in this sentence:

The author effectively appealed to logic by centring the argument around one sound logical conclusion.

What is claim?

500

On the rhetorical triangle, Aristotle paired pathos with this person.

What is the reader/audience?
500

An example of how an author might establish common ground.

What is through plural first-person pronouns? (We, us, our, etc.)

500

The expected likelihood of truth of a sound logical conclusion.

What is 50% or higher?

500

The fallacy in which an arguer distorts an opposing position to make it easier to attack.

What is strawman?

500

The part of analysis included in this sentence:


Because the logical conclusion cited in the previous sentence is more than 50% likely to be true, the argument is persuasive though it hinges on opinion.

What is explanation?

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