This word means go against the counterclaim
refute
The first paragraph is called...
the intro
What the 'E' in ICE is; used after cited evidence
to elaborate or clarify; analysis/explanation of the evidence
The shape commonly used to identify the appeals
A triangle
Another word for the subject of your argument
Topic
The word used to describe what the argument or essay is mostly about
the topic
The paragraphs with the most reasons to support the argument
body paragraphs
The word for shifting the logic/argument the other way
to contradict or refute
A question not meant to be answered but instead asked for effect.
Rhetorical Question
The components of the conclusion
restated thesis, summary of reasons (claims), call to action
This word is used to describe the main point of an argument
a claim
Three things that go into an intro
Hook, Background of Topic, Claim/Thesis
The transition you would use to tell your audience what was most crucial to understand
most importantly
Appeal used when the writer is attempting to sway the audiences morality
The way you should begin your conclusion paragraph
RESTATING the thesis in a new and interesting way
The name of a writing strategy meant to engage the audience of an argument
rhetorical appeals
The name of a paragraph dedicated to the refuting the opposite argument
counter-claim paragraph
A transition that means "first" reason, usually identified as the what?
the primary, or most important, reason
Logos
These digital resources help with properly listing your citations in a works cited page
Google Docs (+extensions) or Easybib.com or OWLPurdue
This is the word we use to move between sources, evidences, or paragraphs when we write
Transitions
An argument should be organized...
Logically
A transition word that means "as a result"
Therefore
The appeal used to make the audience feel some type of way
Pathos
Three things to do when formatting a works cited page
begin on a new page, list sources in alphabetical order, left align with hanging indent