A declaration or statement.
What is an assertion?
The person credited for the breakdown of the appeals and parts of rhetorical situation.
Who is Aristotle?
An incomplete sentence.
What is a fragment / dependent clause?
Aristotle’s Appeals to credibility and what it translates to in English.
What is Ethos that translates to "character" in English?
A paragraph that represents an abstract or summary of analysis (usually used for rhetorical analysis essays).
What is a precis?
Arrogant; vainly proud.
What is haughty?
Treating people as weak or inferior.
What is condescending?
Two complete sentences put together by a comma.
What is a comma splice?
Aristotle’s Appeals to emotion and what it translates to in English.
What is Pathos that translates to "suffering" in English?
The order of body paragraphs.
What is a line of reasoning?
Treating in a condescending manner.
What is patronizing?
Acknowledging and accepting part of the counterargument while still defending yours.
What is a concession?
Words that, with a comma, can combine two complete sentences.
What is a coordinating conjunction / FANBOYS?
Aristotle’s Appeals to reasoning and what it translates to in English.
What is Logos that translates to "the word" in English?
The elements in SPACECAT (in order).
What are
1. Subject
2. Purpose
3. Audience
4. Context
5. Exigence
6. Choice
7. Appeals
8. Tone?
Easily understood, clear.
What is lucid?
The three types of AP essays that will be tested on the AP English Language test.
What are the following essays:
1. Rhetorical Analysis
2. Argumentation
3. Synthesis?
A type of conjunction that causes a dependent clause.
What is subordinating conjunction?
Rejecting the counterargument.
What is a refutation?
The combination of a subject, argument, and organization create?
What is a close thesis?
Trustworthiness; completeness.
What is integrity?
The number of multiple choice questions on the AP exam?
What are 45 questions?
A type of sentences with an independent and dependent phrase combined correctly.
What is a complex sentence?
Latin terms of the Aristotelean argument structure (in order because it’s a structure).
What are Exordium, Narratio, Partitio, Confirmatio, Rufutatio, and Perroratio?
The five cannons of rhetoric.
What are
1. Proofs (the appeals + laws, etc)
2. Structure
3. Style
4. Delivery
5. Memory?