Communication
Across
- 3. Fallacy that relies on arguing for a course of action or belief because it is commonly done or held.
- 5. flaw within the logic/reasoning of an argument
- 8. supports the claim
- 10. relationship between a cause and an effect.
- 11. Arguing from examples to support a conclusion
- 12. arousal of emotion through speech
- 13. credibility of a speaker and includes three dimensions: competence, trustworthiness, and dynamism
- 15. physiological, behavioral, and/or communicative reactions to stimuli that are cognitively processed and experienced as emotional
- 16. conclusion supported by major and minor premises
Down
- 1. connects the claim and the evidence
- 2. perception of a speaker’s expertise in relation to the topic being discussed
- 4. Deriving specifics from what is already known
- 6. short presentations that either update listeners about recent events or provide instructions for how to do something job related
- 7. ceremonial speech that praises or conveys goodwill or blessings in honor of a person, accomplishment, or event.
- 9. communicative strategies we employ to project, maintain, or repair our face or maintain, repair, or challenge another’s face
- 13. speech honoring a person who has died
- 14. reasoning or logic of an argument