Unit 1
Unit 2
Unit 3
Unit 4
Unit 5
100

To persuade into erroneous thinking; mislead

What is delude?

100

To make more severe; to intensify

What is Exacerbate?

100

State of currently occupying an office.

What is Incumbency? 

100

A state of society in which diverse groups participate.

What is Pluralism? 

100

An incorrect term used to describe or designate something.

What is a Misnomer? 

200

Key points authors make and want you to remember most.

What is a Central Idea?

200

 The way words, phrases, and sentences are arranged to demonstrate an author’s meaning, purpose, and style most effectively.

What is Syntax?

200

The author’s attempt to persuade an audience by presenting arguments that focus on and bring about universally held emotions, beliefs, or experiences. It can also be referred to as an appeal to emotion.

What is appeal to Pathos? 

200

 An indirect reference to a person, object, event, or literary work that is widely recognized.

What is an Allusion? 

200

The act of influencing those who make decisions on law or public policy in order to improve society, further equality, or advance the cause of an organization or group of people.

What is Advocacy? 

300

 Facts, definitions, quotations, concrete details, and statistics or data.

What is Types of Evidence?

300

 An effective way to help you understand and evaluate the effectiveness of your evidence for your particular audience.

What is taking Notes? 

300

 Is a comparison between two things, used typically for clarification or explanation.

What is an Analogy?

300

External support for your claim and thesis statement. It is used in informational, persuasive, and argumentative texts.

What is Evidence? 

300

Look at sentences, words, and phrases you have included in both the introduction and the conclusion. Ensure that the flow is smooth from the beginning to the end of each.


What is Transitional Content? 

400

Two actions you perform when you look for meaning in informational text.

What are Determine and Discover? 

400

Explaining or clarifying one item in terms of another on a nonliteral level.

What is a use of Figurative Language? 

400

Being able to determine whether or not a source is accurate, relevant, and or credible. 

What is Evaluating Sources? 

400

Being able to describe scenes in vivid detail using one or more of the five senses. 

What is the use of imagery? 

400

The primary statement that is to be proved through the presentation of an argument.

What is the Claim? 

500

Writing using professional, formal, neutral, objective tones.

What is Informational and Explanatory texts? 

500

List of information you've gathered throughout your research using quotes and or paraphrases to give credit. 

What is a works cited page? 

500

Ensuring the information you present is clear and focused, with a smooth and logical flow, and also interests and engages your readers.

What is Revising for an Audience? 

500

Use when you are arguing the causes of a certain situation (why the situation has happened) or arguing the effects of a certain situation (what the results or effects of the situation are).

What is Cause and Effect Thesis statement?

500

Step of the writing process that includes correcting errors in spelling, grammar, usage, and punctuation.

What is Editing? 

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