TONE
EMOTIVE LANGUAGE
EVIDENCE
ANECDOTES
RHETORICAL QUESTION
100

What is tone?

The attitude of the writer towards a subject or an audience

100

What is emotive language?

Words and phrases that are used to create an emotional response in the reader

100

What is evidence?

Information used to prove something

100

What is an anecdote?

A short, personal story
100

What is a rhetorical question?

A question that is asked to make a point, rather than get an answer

200

How do writers show tone in an essay?

Their words

200

Emotive language can be positive, negative or n_________.

Netural
200

Which of these is NOT evidence: graphs, statistics, questions, percentages 

Questions

200

Why would a write/reader use an anecdote?

To personalise what they are talking about

200

Why do writers/speakers use rhetorical questions?

They want the audience to think about something 

300

How do speakers show tone in a debate?

Their voice and body language

300

Identify ONE example of emotive language: If you take something without permission, then you are a criminal!

The word 'criminal' 

300

WHY is this not good evidence: 95% of students believe that watching TV is boring and they'd rather be at school 24 hours a day

Because it's exaggerated and not true

300

TRUE or FALSE: An anecdote must be about the writer/speaker

False - it can be about someone else

300

Explain why this is NOT a rhetorical question: How are you today?

It is asking for a direct response

400

What is the difference between tone and mood?

Tone = what the author thinks

Mood = how the audience feels

400

Which of these words is NOT a negative emotive word: anger, disgust, dangerous, gratitude, bewildered

gratitude 

400

TRUE or FALSE: An expert opinion is a form of evidence

True

400

WHY is this an anecdote: I was once giving a speech and afterwards I realised I had food in my teeth!

Because it's a short personal story

400

Is this a rhetorical question: How long will it take for us to realise that we are causing damage to the environment? 

Yes it is

500

Which of these is the tone word, and which is the mood word: frightened and suspicious 

Frightened - mood

Suspicious - tone 

500

Identify all THREE examples of emotive language: An innocent bystander was murdered in cold blood in Melbourne

The words “innocent” and “murdered” and the phrase “in cold blood”

500

Why is Wikipedia not a good place to find evidence?

Because you don't know who wrote it and/or if the information is correct

500

Is this an anecdote: Imagine that you're walking to school and you realise you've forgotten all your books!

No - it's a hypothetical and not a personal story

500

Explain why this IS a rhetorical question: How would you feel if you were tested on without your consent?

Because it is getting the audience to think, the writer/speaker doesn't expect an answer