English 10 Final Exam Review
Across
- 4. examples that support an assertion or claim; can be from a text, an outside source, or personal experience
- 7. a word formed by removing letters (he’s, can’t, shouldn’t, I’m, you’ll, etc.)
- 9. the punctuation mark used to form possessives and contractions
- 12. (2 words) an introductory phrase that identifies the title, author, and genre of the work you are writing about
- 15. appealing to morals, values, ethics, trust, or credibility to support an argument
- 16. (2 words) a thesis that simply states the writer’s claim
- 19. an incomplete sentences (missing a subject, missing a verb, or not expressing a full thought)
- 20. appealing to feelings or emotions to support an argument
- 21. appealing to logic, facts, common sense, and reasoning to support an argument
- 22. explanation of how the evidence provided supports the assertion (claim) in a paragraph
- 24. (2 words) when two sentences are combined together without proper punctuation
- 25. (2 words) a method of documenting sources in the text of a paper; also called in-text citation
Down
- 1. the punctuation marks used to cite a source at the end of a sentence
- 2. (2 words) a sentence presenting the overall argument of an essay; the writer’s opinion disguised as a fact
- 3. (2 words) a list of all the outside sources you have documented in a research paper
- 5. the part of speech that connects words, phrases, clauses, or sentences (FANBOYS)
- 6. the punctuation mark used to link two closely related complete sentences
- 8. (2 words) a thesis that states the writer’s claim PLUS supporting reasons (generally using “because”)
- 10. (3 words) a word-for-word copy of a passage from a source
- 11. the punctuation mark used to introduce items in a list
- 13. a topic sentence that introduces the subject of a body paragraph; also called a claim
- 14. (2 words) the punctuation marks you put around material quoted directly from a source
- 17. (2 words) a method of documenting sources in the text of a paper; also called parenthetical citation
- 18. (2 words) how we write in English classes to maintain professionalism; no contractions, slang, etc.
- 23. a “word bridge” that connects ideas in sentences and/or paragraphs