This is used to help look better: focused on the way you stand and shift during speeches.
What is body posture?
This is the point you are making.
What is the claim?
This is someone who has focused on this subject who is giving their testimony on how the topic works.
What is expert testimony?
The difference between 2 things being interrelated and 2 things happening at the same time.
What is causation/correlation?
Rebuttal/attack speech 4 letter code
What is TRIO?
Turn
Reduce
Indict
Outweigh
This is used to keep the audience knowing you are connecting with them and talking to them. Forehead is the right spot.
What is eye contact?
This is why your claim makes sense and can be argued.
What is a warrant/reason?
This is normally numbers that are used to show a trend or one-time experiment.
What is statistics?
This is coming to a conclusion quicker than you can understand the true argument.
What is a hasty generalization?
The most valuable resource in a debate round.
What is speech time?
This is used to show you think something is important enough to motion about. Use too many and it can be dangerous.
What are hand gestures?
Expert opinion, statistics, etc.
What is the evidence?
These were conducted or completed by colleges or professionals that are used to provide logical and empirical analysis for an issue.
What are research journals/studies?
This is when you attack the author's credibility without discussing the merits of the argument.
What is an ad hominem?
What is 18 minutes?
This is to help the way you speak. Focus on consonants and draw out vowels.
What is articulation?
This is how you can support your warrant using different sources or citations.f
What is backing?
This is an intangible piece of evidence that may only be relatable to oneself.
What is an anecdote/personal story?
This is when you say you are attacking one argument but really attack another by mislabeling it.
What is a straw man?
Aristotle's 3 types of persuasive argumentation.
What is ethos, pathos, and logos?
This is the number one important thing to keep in mind about how the audience perceives you. Ties in all the other traits of a persuasive speaker.
What is confidence?
This is why your argument is important; without it, your argument does not matter.
What is the unstated value/impact?
This is when you draw conclusions that are often used to make illogical argumentation from one small impact to a massive one with a small chance of it occurring.
What is a slippery slope?
The amount of times the popular vote has been won but the electoral college has been lost.
What is 5?