American Dream
Rhetoric
Speakers
Figures of Speech
Logical Fallacies
100

This legal document forms the basis for the American Dream.

What is the Declaration of Independence?

100

The three elements of rhetoric are called this.

What is the rhetorical triangle? 

100

This was the speaker for "What to the Slave is the Fourth of July."

Who is Douglass?

100

This figure of speech uses "like" or "as".

What is a simile? 

100

This fallacy pressures us to do something just because many other people like us are doing it.

What is bandwagon?

200
"Living large" is an example of this.

What is the American Dream.

200

This type of rhetoric is usually present when speakers tell stories. 

What is pathos?

200

This was the speaker for "I'm Sick and Tired of being Sick and Tired."

Who is Hammer?

200

This figure of speech repeats the same consonants at the beginning of words.

What is alliteration? 

200

This fallacy changes or exaggerates an opponent’s position to make it easier to refute.

What is strawman?

300

This is DACA.

What is Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals.

300

This type of rhetoric is used when someone makes moral arguments.

What is ethos?

300

This was the speaker for "Remarks at the Brandenburg Gate."

Who is Reagan? 

300

This figure of speech uses exaggeration. 

What is hyperbole? 

300

This fallacy condemns an argument because of where it began, how it began, or who began it.

What is genetic fallacy?

400

Those who benefit from DACA are called this.

What are Dreamers?
400

This person literally wrote the book on rhetoric. 

Who is Aristotle?

400

This was the speaker for ""Ain't I a Woman"."

Who is Truth?

400

An example of this figure of speech is Southerners calling a shopping cart a “buggy."

What is colloquialism? 
400

This fallacy involves assuming the very thing one is trying to prove.

What is begging the question?

500

The term "American Dream" first appear in this book.

What is The Epic of America.

500

This was an example used in class for pathos.

What is music?

500

This was the historical context for Martin Luther King Jr.'s speech.

What is the Civil Rights Era?
500

An example of this figure of speech is saying someone is "pushing up daisies" when they die.

What is euphemism? 

500

This fallacy involves arguments that make a linguistic distinctions between two things that are actually not different form each other.

What is distinction without difference?

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