Rhetorical Situation
Satire
Satire 2
Verbal Argument
Mr. Noon Trivia
100

The appeal to logic

Logos

100

Using humor to illuminate an issue is known as

Satire


100

Doing/saying one thing and meaning another is called

irony

100

The use of invalid or otherwise faulty reasoning

fallacy

100

Mr. Noon's favorite baseball team

D backs

200

The appeal to emotion

Pathos


200

Horatian satire is

Lighthearted 

200

an imitation of the style of a particular writer, artist, or genre with deliberate exaggeration for comic effect.

Parody

200

Attacking the character of the arguer is 

Ad hominem 

200

The new amount of tats on Mr. Noon's body

300

Using stats and facts to support an argument is an example of

Logos

300

Juvenalian satire is

darker and more bitter

300

A marriage councilor filing for divorce; a police officer breaking the law; the police station getting robbed; are all examples of

Situational irony

300

Creating a fake argument and dismantling it is

Strawman

300

The name of Mr. Noon's girlfriend

Jenna

400

The event or occurrence that prompts rhetorical discourse

Exigence

400

Exclaiming "that's awesome!" after seeing you have a flat tire is an example of

verbal irony

400

Saying it was "a little windy" during hurricane Katrina or saying the nukes detonated over Japan were "small blasts" is an example of

understatement 

400

Building these two things is extremely important when trying to persuade somone

Empathy and credibility 

400

Mr. Noon's birthday and year

1/20/1999

500

Lou Gehrig's diagnosis of ALS is an example of knowing

Context

500

An image of a dog walking a human is an example of

reversal - roles are swapped

500
"A Modest Proposal" is an example of this type of satire

Juvenalian 

500

Exclaiming all guys named Nicolas are handsome based on just seeing Mr. Noon is an example of

hasty generalization

500

Mr. Noon's least favorite student this quarter

Bella De La Ossa

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