The Cause/Effect essay's introduction paragraph consists of the anecdote hook, context, and the _____?
THESIS
Give an example of a circular reasoning fallacy.
(IF YOU ANSWER CORRECTLY, YOU MAY BLOCK ONE TEAM FROM STEALING AT THE NEXT OPPORTUNITY).
America is the best because the best country is America.
Give an example of a slippery slope fallacy.
(YOU MAY CHOOSE THE NEXT PLAYER FROM ANOTHER TEAM TO ANSWER THE NEXT QUESTION)
If you skip class, you'll end up pregnant and homeless.
Why is it against the law for a man living in North Carolina to be buried in South Carolina?
(YOU MAY PASS THIS QUESTION TO ONE OF YOUR FELLOW TEAMMATES, BUT YOUR PROFESSOR GETS TO DECIDE WHICH TEAMMATE. IF YOUR TEAMMATE ANSWERS CORRECTLY, YOU WIN TRIPLE POINTS. IF THEY ANSWER INCORRECTLY, YOU LOSE TRIPLE POINTS).
You don't bury a man who is living. He is still alive.
How can a person go 25 days without sleep?
No, sniffing coke is not an answer.
They sleep at night or they do not stay awake 25 consecutive days in a row.
("Day" does not mean a full 24 hours, so shut up.)
A man dressed in all black is walking down a country lane. Suddenly, a large black car with no lights on comes around the corner and screeches to a halt, avoiding hitting the man dressed in all black. How did the car’s driver know he was there?
It's daytime.
A woman gives a filthy beggar five oranges, two waters, and a bag of chips; the woman is the filthy beggar's sister, but the filthy beggar is not the woman's brother. How is this possible?
(IF YOU ANSWER CORRECTLY, YOU GET TO CHOOSE WHICH OTHER TEAM GETS TO STEAL NEXT.)
The beggar is the woman's sister.
An angry soccer player throws a soccer ball. The ball travels a distance of 10 feet without hitting anything and then immediately returns to him. How is this possible?
(IF YOU ANSWER INCORRECTLY, YOU MAY CHOOSE A TEAM TO LOSE 200 POINTS. THEY CAN RETALIATE ON THEIR NEXT TURN.)
He throws the ball straight up and gravity brought the ball back to him.
Two men play five games of checkers. Each man wins the same number of games. There are no ties. Explain this.
(YOU MAY PASS THIS QUESTION TO ONE OF YOUR FELLOW TEAMMATES, BUT THE TEAM BEFORE YOU GETS TO DECIDE WHICH TEAMMATE. IF YOUR TEAMMATE ANSWERS CORRECTLY, YOU WIN TRIPLE POINTS. IF THEY ANSWER INCORRECTLY, YOU LOSE TRIPLE POINTS).
They were playing different people.
What is the difference between race, ethnicity, and nationality?
(YOU HAVE THE OPTION TO CHOOSE A TEAM WHOSE NEXT TURN WILL BE SKIPPED. IF YOU CHOOSE TO SKIP THEM, THEY WILL NOT BE PENALIZED IF THEY ANSWER INCORRECTLY ON THEIR NEXT TURN. IF THEY ANSWER CORRECTLY, THEY GET ADDITIONAL POINTS.)
RACE = PHYSICAL APPEARANCE
ETHNICITY = CULTURE AND SHARED PRACTICES
NATIONALITY = THE COUNTRY YOU WERE BORN
Is this in-text citation cited correctly in MLA? The following quote is an excerpt from a BOOK:
It can be argued that "some are born great, some achieve greatness, and others have greatness thrust upon them” (Shakespeare).
If not, what is wrong with the citation?
(DOUBLE THE POINTS IF YOU ANSWER CORRECTLY.)
No. It's missing the page number or timestamp if it's an audiobook.
It can be argued that "some are born great, some achieve greatness, and others have greatness thrust upon them” (Shakespeare, p. 4).
It can be argued that "some are born great, some achieve greatness, and others have greatness thrust upon them” (Shakespeare, 01:33:07).
There are 8 countries that begin with the letter "I". Name at least 5 of those countries.
(DOUBLE POINTS IF YOU NAME THEM ALL)
ICELAND, INDIA, INDONESIA, IRAN, IRAQ, IRELAND, ISRAEL, AND ITALY
Name six cities in Europe.
(YOU MAY CHOOSE ANOTHER PLAYER FROM YOUR TEAM TO ANSWER THIS, BUT YOUR PROFESSOR GETS TO CHOOSE WHICH ONE).
MADRID, BERLIN, BARCELONA, LONDON, MILAN, ROME, PARIS, VIENNA, PRAGUE, ATHENS, LISBON, FLORENCE, STOCKHOLM, MUNICH, AMSTERDAM, VENICE, ISTANBUL, DUBLIN, BUDAPEST, COPENHAGEN, ETC.
There are eight states in the U.S. that begin with the letter "M". Name at least six of them.
(YOU MAY CHOOSE A PLAYER FROM ANOTHER TEAM TO ANSWER THIS QUESTION. IF THEY ANSWER INCORRECTLY, YOUR PENALTY WILL BE DOUBLE AND THEY LOSE 300 POINTS. IF THEY ANSWER CORRECTLY, THEY WIN DOUBLE POINTS AND YOU LOSE DOUBLE POINTS)
Maine, Maryland,Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, and Montana
Two children are born on the same EXACT day by the same mother and father but they are not twins. How is that possible?
They are triplets, quadruplets, quintuplets, etc.!
They are two of three, four, five, etc.
In the video about legal prostitution, what U.S. state is prostitution legal in and what is the name of the brothel in the video?
(IF YOU ANSWER INCORRECTLY, YOU MAY CHOOSE ANOTHER PLAYER FROM ANY TEAM TO ANSWER THIS QUESTION. IF THEY ANSWER INCORRECTLY, THEY LOSE 400 POINTS. IF THEY ANSWER CORRECTLY, THEY GAIN AN ADDITIONAL 400 POINTS.)
NEVADA; THE BUNNY RANCH
A girl was ten on her last birthday and will be twelve on her next birthday. How is this possible?
(IF YOU ANSWER CORRECTLY, YOU MAY CHOOSE ANOTHER TEAM YOU WOULD LIKE TO LOSE 400 POINTS)
Today is her eleventh birthday.
Give an example of a false analogy fallacy.
(DOUBLE POINTS IF ANSWERED CORRECTLY, DOUBLE POINTS LOST IF ANSWERED INCORRECTLY).
If we ban guns, we might as well ban knives.
What's the difference between a false dichotomy and False/Faulty analogy fallacy? Give an example of both.
(You may choose another player from your team to answer this question. You will lose TRIPLE the points if they answer incorrectly. You will only receive 400 points if they answer correctly.)
False dichotomy - presenting only two options when more options exist.
example: Either you love me or hate me.
False/Faulty Analogy - attempting to compare two things that are seemingly alike, but they are not.
example: If we ban guns in the classroom, we might as well ban scissors in art class.
"I can make you laugh or make you cry. You can't run from me or even hide. You all become me when you die." I am not a ghost or spirit. What am I?
A memory/Memories
Name six logical fallacies we have discussed in class.
(TRIPLE THE POINTS IF YOU CAN NAME ALL TWELVE)
ad hominem, slippery slope, hasty generalization, logical non sequitur, literary non sequitur, false dichotomy/dilemma, red herring, faulty/false analogy, circular reasoning, complex/trick question, relativist, and begging the question
Spell your current English instructor's entire first and last name correctly. Bonus points if you know and can spell his middle name also.
Oh, shut up! You knew this was coming.
(EXTRA 500 IFANSWERED CORRECTLY)
I-B-E-A-W-U-C-H-I
T-R-A-V-I-S
U-Z-O-E-G-W-U
You leave home and go to your right. You reach a corner and turn left. You reach another corner and turn left again. You reach another corner and turn left again and go home. When you get there, there is a person with a mask there waiting for you.
You're not being robbed and it's not Halloween. What’s happening?
(CHOOSE ANOTHER TEAM TO ANSWER THIS IF YOU LIKE)
You're playing baseball!
Name all of your classmates... Including the ones who are absent.
(YOU MAY CHOOSE A PLAYER FROM ANOTHER TEAM TO ANSWER THIS QUESTION. IF THEY ANSWER INCORRECTLY, YOUR PENALTY WILL BE DOUBLE AND THEY LOSE 500 POINTS. IF THEY ANSWER CORRECTLY, THEY WIN DOUBLE POINTS AND YOU LOSE DOUBLE POINTS)
In 40 seconds, close your eyes and name eight African countries.
(YOU MAY CHOOSE A PLAYER FROM ANOTHER TEAM TO ANSWER THIS QUESTION. IF THEY ANSWER INCORRECTLY, YOUR PENALTY WILL BE DOUBLE AND THEY LOSE 500 POINTS. IF THEY ANSWER CORRECTLY, THEY WIN DOUBLE POINTS AND YOU LOSE TRIPLE POINTS)