Poetry
Figurative Langage
Archetypes
Rhetorical Appeals/Devices
Reasoning
100

This is a group of lines in a poem, separated by a space, that functions much like a paragraph does in a piece of prose.

What is a Stanza?

100

What is a hyperbole?

What is an exaggerated statement or claim 

100

In many stories, this setting symbolizes a journey into the character's self, or a test of a character's internal strength when found becomes invisible.

What is The Cave?

100

This rhetorical appeal, also known as Logos, uses facts, definitions, and "if-then" statements to convince the reader.

What is an Appeal to Logic?

100

Which type of reasoning is used in the following statement? 'Every time I eat peanuts, I get a rash. Therefore, I am likely allergic to peanuts.' (specific to broad conclusion)

What is inductive reasoning

200

"The silent snake slithered" is an example of this device, where the same consonant sound repeats at the start of words.

What is Alliteration?

200

What is being compared in the metaphor "The politician is a snake"?

What is the politician's character or behavior 

200

This character archetype is known for mischief and often uses their wits to play tricks on others, sometimes helping the hero and sometimes causing trouble.


Who is the Trickster?

200

This appeal, also known as Pathos, tries to win over the audience by making them feel sad, angry, or excited.

What is an Appeal to Emotion?

200

Which of the following is an example of a 'Logical Fallacy'? 

A. Arguing that a new law is bad simply because the person who proposed it is unpopular.

B. Providing a counterclaim to show that you understand the opposing view.

C. Defining a difficult term a the beginning of an essay.

D. Using a statistic from a government study to support a claim

What is A. Arguing that a new law is bad simply because the person who proposed it is unpopular.

300

This sound device involves the repetition of vowel sounds within a line of poetry, such as the "e" sound in "the fleet feet sweep by the sleeping geese."

What is Assonance?

300

This is a reference to a well-known person, place, event, or literary work that the author expects the reader to recognize.

What is an Allusion?

300

Representing the darker side of the Hero's own personality or the ultimate evil in the story, this archetype exists to be the Hero's greatest obstacle.

Who is the Shadow (or Villain)?

300

This appeal, also known as Ethos, focuses on the author's credibility, character, or "right and wrong."

What is an Appeal to Ethics (or Credibility)?

300

This is the general term for any error in reasoning that makes an argument "unsound," even if the evidence used is technically true.

What is a Logical Fallacy?

400

This occurs when a poet compares two unlike things throughout several stanzas or even the entire length of a poem.

What is an Extended Metaphor?

400

These are common expressions that mean something different from their literal words, such as "break a leg" or "under the weather."

What is an Idiom?

400

The man said "when he was a child, he acted a child, but once he became a man, he put away childish things." This archetype symbol usually symbolizes flow of time and life.

What is the River?

400

If an advertisement shows a crying puppy to get you to donate money, they are primarily using this appeal.

What is Pathos (or Emotion)?

400

This type of logical reasoning is based on a premise such as apple is a fruit, then goes on with a fact for example, all fruits have seeds. From these two pieces of information form a conclusion, apple have seeds. (General to specific)

What is deductive reasoning

500

What is the primary difference between 'Assonance' and 'Alliteration'?

What is "assonance repeats vowels while alliteration repeat initial consonant sounds."

500

If a poet describes a 'heavy silence,' they are using a comparison to suggest that the quiet felt physically burdensome. This is an example of:  

What is a Metaphor?

500

The people were seen holding hands after the sudden destruction of the Twin Towers. This symbolic archetype represents wholeness, unity, and the infinite cycle of life and death, often seen in symbols like the "Wheel of Fortune."

What is a Circle? 

500

An author who uses a biased tone and ignores all "relevant" evidence to the contrary is likely trying to create this—an unfair preference for one side.

What is Bias?

500

This inductive reasoning error happens when an author reaches a broad conclusion based on too small of a "sample size" or just one example.

What is a Hasty Generalization?

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