you TURN my head right round
Defense Attorneys
Holy S***
How does this work again?
Before & After
100

The type of argument a turn is

What is offensive case response?

100

The part of a DA which explains what the affirmative does to trigger the DA

What is a link?

100

The name for the card which explains how the plan will resolve the harms

What is solvency?

100

Total prep time for each competitor

What is four minutes?

100

The icebreaker homeported in Seattle, Washington AND a marine echinoderm with five or more radiating arms. 

What is the Polar Star fish?

200

Argument that reverses the effect of an impact

What is an impact turn?

200

The Third Part of a Disadvantage

What is an internal link?

200

Number of stock issues in NFA-LD

What is four?

200

speech where counterplans are usually introduced

What is the 1NC?

200

a tropical American ant that has a painful and sometimes dangerous sting AND the world's largest desert, coldest, driest, and windiest continent

What is fire ant - artica?

300

Occurs when a link turn and an impact turn is run

What is a double turn?

300

Aff argument to answer the uniqueness of a DA

What is a nonuniq argument?

300

The stock issue which describes what prevents the current system from solving those harms

What is inherency?

300

Total speech time for the affirmative

What is 15 minutes?

300

one naturally occurring mineral containing one or more of 17 metallic elements AND water found in nature with some dissolved salts present

What is rare earth mineral water?

400

Ex. Don’t buy concert tickets cause they’re expensive. They cost $80 and you only have $100 in cash.

Argument - If you don’t go to the concert, you will be unmotivated and have less money. 

The type of argument. 

What is link turn?

400

When the uniqueness is negative, the DA is most likely what type of DA

What is a linear DA?

400

The stock issue addressed by the plan

What is topicality?

400
The website where teams should disclose their cases and rounds

What is openCaselist?

400

a thick subsurface layer of soil that remains frozen throughout the year, occurring chiefly in polar regions AND injury to body tissues caused by exposure to extreme cold, typically affecting the nose, fingers, or toes and sometimes resulting in gangrene

What is permafrostbite?