ENG 102 EXAM Flashcards

(65 cards)

1
Q

An argument consists of?

A

purpose, audience and situation

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2
Q

What is the purpose in an argument?

A

persuasion

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3
Q

Who is the audience in an argument?

A

who you are trying to persuade

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4
Q

What is the situation in an argument?

A

language and format

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5
Q

How to analyze an argument?

A
  • what the writer is speaking
  • writers position or thesis
  • identify the strongest part
  • identify the weakest part
  • determine position on writers stance
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6
Q

What makes a solid argument?

A
  • a question that drives the research
  • identify why care (why worth having)
  • use specific terms
  • use objective terms (not to condemn but persuade)
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7
Q

Characteristics of an effective thesis

A
  • sentence at end of intro paragraph that identifies most important point in the essay
  • arguable
  • specific
  • identify core focus
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8
Q

Introduction to Essay

A
  • provides specific context for argument
  • makes bold claims
  • includes thesis at end
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9
Q

Counter Argument of Essay

A
  • addresses alternative perspective
  • addresses the weaknesses
  • acknowledge validity of the other perspectives
  • proves strength in arguments by demonstrating strong points against it

*cannot go in introduction or conclusion
*must test counter argument

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10
Q

Conclusion to Essay

A
  • moves away from the summary
  • answers the question “so what”
  • addresses significance of argument
  • provides readers with something to do or think
  • is not a summary of your argument or restatement of thesis
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11
Q

What is a logical fallacy?

A
  • breakdowns or flaws in logic
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12
Q

Fallible?

A

not perfect

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13
Q

Infallible

A

perfect

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14
Q

Deductive Reasoning

A
  • tries to get certainty

ex. if a=b and b=c then c=a

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15
Q

Inductive Reasoning

A
  • conclusion drawn from an array of facts

*concerned with probability not certainty

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16
Q

Requirements of Inductive Reasoning

A
  • sufficient evidence = lots of evidence
  • representative evidence = different types
  • relevant evidence = what drawing conclusion on
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17
Q

Hasty Generalization

A
  • an argument that draws a sweeping conclusion based on little evidence

ex. I shouldn’t drink too much coffee tiktok says it causes cancer

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18
Q

Band Wagon Appeal

A
  • bases ones opinion on your choice
  • urges the audience to agree with majority

ex. most people think x is true, therefor x is true

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19
Q

Circular Reasoning

A

*begging the question

  • supports the argument by restating the argument in different words
  • assumes what your trying to prove
  • happens when you hear something off assumptions

ex. marvel movies are popular because most people love them

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20
Q

Either-Or (False Dilemma)

A
  • argues that two alternatives are possible in a situation that is actually more complex

ex. if your not vegan you don’t care about animals

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21
Q

Ad Hominem (To the Man)

A
  • arguments that make personal attacks on those who support opposing side rather than address the position itself

ex. of course she doesn’t like kids, she doesn’t have any of her own.

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22
Q

Faulty Analogies

A
  • comparisons that do not hold up in some way that is crucial to the argument they used to support

ex. parents who aren’t doctors are not allowed to operate on their children, therefore parents who aren’t teachers should not be allowed to teach their children.

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23
Q

Post Hoc ( post hoc, ergo propter hoc)

A
  • after this therefore because of this

ex. event a happened, event b happened. event a caused event b.

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24
Q

Slippery Slope

A
  • argues that if a certain event occurs it will set off a chain of events that will cause disaster

ex. if i fail this final i will be penniless
ex. no morning coffee results in the worst day ever

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25
Straw Man
- misrepresent an opposing argument, characterizing it has more extreme or otherwise different than it actually is, to attack more easily. ex. when a teacher suggests the class spend more time on math, a parent complains the teacher doesn't care about reading or writing.
26
ICE Method
I- introduce C- cite E- explain
27
Antagonist
- bad guy *causes problems for main character
28
Protagonist
- good guy * typically the main character
29
What is a short story?
- brief narrative containing characters -simple plot and conflict which leads to climax and solution
30
5 Elements of a Short Story
- characters - setting - conflict - theme - plot
31
Plot Structure
1. introduction - setting, background, characters 2. rising action - conflict 3. climax - high point, deciding factor 4. falling action - protagonist completes action 5. resolution - the end, solution to the story
32
Speaker
- speaker is not the poet - the voice of the poem (sometimes characters, sometimes voice)
33
Tone
- the attitude a literary work takes to words its subject - how the attitude is revealed through dictation (specific word choice)
34
Rhyme Scheme
- the pattern of end rhymes in a poem often noted by letters
35
Free Verse
- pattern of stressed syllables - a poem that does not rhyme or have regular meter
36
Imagery
- any sensory detail in literary work that evokes a feeling, calls to mind an idea, or describes an object in a way that appeals to readers vision
37
Imagery Auditory Tactile Olfactory
- visual imagery - hearing - touch - smell
38
Alliteration
- the repetition of initial sound through a sequence of words
39
Consonance
- the repetition of sound produces by consonants within a line of poetry or verse
40
Assonance
- the repetition of vowel sounds in a line of poetry or verse
41
Cacophony
- a harsh, discordant mixture of sounds -use hard consonants that require an explosive delivery
42
Euphony
- a harmonious combination of sounds - uses long vowels and consonants
43
What is Aristotle's Three Unities?
- unity of time - unity of place - unity of actions
44
Unity of Actions
- a tragedy should have one principle action * key to the story
45
Unity of Time
- the action in a tragedy should occur over a period of no more than 24 hours
46
Unity of Place
- a tragedy should exist in a single physical place
47
" In Praise of a clash of culture"
- Carlos Fraenkel - non fiction
48
" The science of why we don't believe in science"
- Chris Mooney - non fiction
49
"Names/ Nombres"
- Julia Alverez - non fiction
50
" Surrendering "
- Ocean Vuong - non fiction
51
" A Private Experience"
- Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie - short story
52
" The Yellow Wallpaper "
- Charlotte Perkins Gilman - short story
53
" Sonny's Blues "
- James Baldwin - short story
54
" Personal "
- Tony Hoagland - poem
55
" Conscience "
- Anna Kamienska - poem
56
" Those Winter Sundays "
- Robert Hayden - poem
57
" Dignity "
- Dove Dupree - slam poem
58
" Head Over Heels "
- Emi Mahound - slam poetry
59
'' The Table "
- Ida Fink - drama
60
" The Stronger "
- August Strindberg - drama
61
Character Change
- change, make mistakes, apologize, set things right and learn from it ex. Antagonist becomes Protagonist
62
Dynamic Character
- changes throughout the story
63
Static Character
- does not change throughout the story
64
What causes character change?
- people and events
65
How do events change how characters behave?
- moment of clarity - evaluate character choices - dialog/interactions - responses to story events