Uses "like" or "as" to compare two unrelated objects.
What is a simile?
Provides vivid and emotional language.
What is color?
Using they over he is an example of this.
What is avoiding the generic "he"?
What is evicting emotion?
You use these to surround an in-text citation in your writings.
What are parenthesis.
What is personification?
Has few grammatical and word choice errors.
What is correctness?
This is assuming qualities and actions upon groups of people based or race, gender, etc.
What is stereotyping?
This paints a picture in your audience's mind.
You use this font when citing a novel/periodical.
What are italics?
Words that refer to tangible objects like people, places, and things.
What are concrete words?
This conveys ideas precisely and simply.
What is clarity?
Using (job)person over (job)man is an example of this.
What is avoiding stereotyping by gender?
This uses the same word or phrase to add emotion to your speeches.
What is repetition?
This goes at the end of your citations.
Potent group of culture types.
What are Ideographs?
This is the adaption to audience and culture.
What is cultural sensitivity?
Using human over man is an example of this.
What is avoiding the use of "man"?
This is built around a similar sentence structure to evict emotion.
What is parallelism?
You include this if you access a source on a streaming service (Netflix, Hulu, etc).
What is a link?
Represents a close association.
What is Synecdoche?
This is pictorial and easy to remember.
What is concreteness?
Using "Japanese American" over "Asian".
What is using names that groups identify with?
This places two OPPOSITE ideas within a balanced structure.
What is an antithesis?
These months are not abbreviated when citing.
What are May, June, and July?