What Fallacy is this?
Fallacy Google Definitions
Fallacy Examples
100

You make a person look bad to disband their argument

Ad Hominem

100

is a logical fallacy and rhetorical device that discredits an argument by accusing the opponent of hypocrisy—doing the same thing they criticize

Tu Quoque Fallacy
100

Coworkers were having a topic about climate change. Kerry said she doesn't believe it's true because she's never heard of it or seen it happening.

Personal Incredulity Fallacy 

200

When someone uses a personal experience to justify a argument that they had 

Anecdotal Fallacy 
200

occurs when someone manipulates the audience's emotions—such as fear, pity, or joy—to win an argument, rather than using relevant facts, evidence, or logical reasoning

Appeal to Emotion Fallacy 

200

Abigail stated, '' If a bee stings you then you'll eventually die from a stinger they leave inside your skin. So don't get stung!''

Slippery Slope Fallacy 

300

This fallacy is also known as ''Ultimatum''

Black-or-White/ False Dilemma Fallacy 

300

 is an informal logical fallacy where someone applies a general rule or standard to others but claims an unjustified exemption for themselves or a specific case

Special Pleading Fallacy

300

During a interview, Sabrina the interviewer switched around Melinda's statements, which made her arguments sound horrible to society.

Straw-Man Fallacy 

400

When people believe a celebrity on a subject they have no expertise in 

False Authority Fallacy

400

 is a logical fallacy that occurs when someone argues that a proposition is true, valid, or good simply because many people believe it or are doing it

Bandwagon Fallacy

400

During a class presentation, jealous Jenny asked the top student Michael if he was still bullying poor penny to do all his assignments for him. 

Loaded Question 

500

When someone plays a different meaning leading them to not tell the truth 

Ambiguity Fallacy 

500

 is the mistaken belief that if a particular random event occurs more frequently than normal during the past, it is less likely to happen in the future (or vice versa). It stems from the false assumption that independent, random events, like coin flips or roulette spins, are connected and "due" to balance out

The Gambler's Fallacy

500

In a group conversation about society problems George said, ''I seen 3 black people steal from someone in my lifetime. That means they all steal from somewhere eventually.''

Cherry-Picking Fallacy