VOCAB
LIT TERMS
SPACE CAT
RHET. TERMS
PASSAGES
100

Define jocular 

fond of or characterized by joking; humorous or playful.

100

T/F Onomatopoeia is the expression of one's meaning by using language that normally signifies the opposite, typically for humorous or emphatic effect.

FALSE


It is the formation of a word from a sound associated with what is named

100
What does the E stand for in SPACECAT? And what does it mean?

EXIGENCE-MOTIVATION/SPARK

100
List 2 rhetorical appeals

ethos, pathos, logos

100

What did John Muir do for a living?

He was a naturalist

200

Define Laconic 

(of a person, speech, or style of writing) using very few words.

200
Define personification and give an example of it

the attribution of a personal nature or human characteristics to something nonhuman, or the representation of an abstract quality in human form.

200
List the 3 Appeals and list what each appeals to 

Ethos- Ethics (credibility of the person speaking)- Speaker

Pathos-Emotion (how the audience feels)-Audience

Logos-Logic (facts, research, etc.)- Message

200

List 3 examples of sufficient evidence in an argument 

- anecdote 

- experiment

- testimony

- statistic 

200

What national park is being discussed in the first passage?

Yosemite 

300

Define Portentous

hinting at something ominous or wrong that may happen-foreshadowing of sorts

300

Give an example of a personal anecdote

A personal anecdote is a real-life story/ies that often happened to the writer or speaker.

300
What is Tone and how can the reader note shifts in the author's tone?

Tone is the speaker/writer's attitude towards the subject of a text

Tone shifts: rhetorical questions, simple sentences, large paragraphs to simple sentences. 

300

Define allusion 

A reference, explicit or implicit to something in pervious literature or history 
300

UNICEF stands for what?

United Nations International Children's Emergency Fund

400

Explain what ethics are

moral principles that govern a person's behavior or the conducting of an activity.


400

Define Irony and give an example of it 

the expression of one's meaning by using language that normally signifies the opposite, typically for humorous or emphatic effect.

400

Explain why it's so important to know the context of a piece of literature.

Context is the circumstances surrounding the writing. Knowing the context of when something/where something was written allows the reader some more insight/knowledge into where the author may have been at the time.

400

"I have a dream...I have a dream.."

The following is an example of which of the following rhetorical device?

anaphora 

400

The third passage is about who?

Fredrick Douglas 

500

Define the word: Contrived and use it in a sentence

deliberately created rather than arising naturally or spontaneously.


500

What is a critical audience?

audiences who consider themselves intelligent and probably more intelligent than you. They will thus pick holes in what you say and disbelieve your assertions.

500

List what each letter stands for 

SPEAKER

PURPOSE

AUDIENCE

CONTEXT

EXIGENCE

CHOICES

APPEALS

TONE

500

"I started questioning gender-based assumptions when at eight i was confused at being called "bossy," because I wanted to direct the plays we would put on for our parents-"

The following is an example of which rhetorical device?

Anecdote

500

What year was the weekly feature of The New York Times Magazine's column by Randy Cohen called "The Ethicist," published?

2003