SLO Vocabulary Terms Flashcards

(30 cards)

1
Q

Evaluate

A

Examine and judge carefully. To judge or determine the significance, worth or quality of something; to assess.

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2
Q

Analysis

A

The process or result of identifying the parts of a whole and their relationships to one another.

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3
Q

Explicit

A

Clearly expressed or fully stated in the actual text.

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4
Q

Connotation

A

The range of associations that a word or phrase suggests in addition to its dictionary meaning.

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5
Q

Irony

A

Incongruity between the actual result of a sequence of events and the expected result.

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6
Q

Inference

A

A judgment based on reasoning rather than on a direct or explicit statement. A conclusion based on facts or circumstances

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7
Q

Tone

A

The attitude of the author toward the audience, characters, subject or the work itself.

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8
Q

Refutation

A

Countering or anticipated arguments

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9
Q

Juxtaposition

A

Placing one thing adjacent to another, especially for comparison and contrast

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10
Q

Rhetoric

A

The art and study of effective writing and speech

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11
Q

Diction

A

Specific word choices am author makes to persuade or to convey tone
Ex: “She began imitating his careful diction.”

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12
Q

Phrase

A

A group of words that do not contain at least one paired subject and predicate

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13
Q

Ethos

A

Mode of persuasion requiring speakers to establish their credibility, skill, or morality on a given subject to an intended audience

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14
Q

Clause

A

A group of words containing at least one paired subject and predicate

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15
Q

Pathos

A

Mode of persuasion speakers use when appealing to the various emotions of the audience, including fear, inspiration, intimidation, idealism, anger, nostalgia, despair, optimism, etc.

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16
Q

Logos

A

Mode of persuasion speakers use when appealing to the audience’s ability to distinguish, through discourse, the difference between what is reasonable or unreasonable.

17
Q

Evidence

A

Proof coming from sources, fieldwork, and research that validates any logical support of an argument

18
Q

Reasons

A

Statements of logic that offer support for an argument

19
Q

Comma Splice

A

A type of Run-On sentence in which the writer has erroneously placed only a comma between two independent clauses, resulting in a failure to link the two according to grammatical convention.

20
Q

Claims

A

Any statements of belief that can be contested: argument

21
Q

Claim of Policy

A

A statement made to endorse specific courses of action

22
Q

Claim of Value

A

A statement made to show that something is moral or immoral

23
Q

Fallacy

A

Rationals of claims that might seem reasonable, but are actually unsound-and usually false.

24
Q

Claim of Fact

A

A statement made to verify authenticity of something

25
Fused Sentence
A type of Run-On sentence in which the writer has failed to make any attempt either to link or separate two independent clauses, utilizing neither punctuation, nor conjunctions
26
Loose Sentence
A sentence structure in which a main clause is followed by subordinate phrases and clauses
27
parallelism
The similarity of structure in a pair of series of related words, phrases, or clauses
28
Periodic Sentence
A long and frequently involved sentence, marked by suspended syntax, in which the sense is not completed until the final word
29
Ambiguity
The presence of two or more possible meanings in any passage.
30
Concession
An argumentative strategy by which a speaker or writer acknowledges the validity of an opponent's point.