Q2 Benchmark Study Guide
Across
- 5. Why the author wrote the argument; what they want to achieve.
- 8. Punctuation mark used to introduce information.
- 9. Verb tense showing an action completed before another action.
- 11. The main point an author is trying to prove.
- 13. The opposing viewpoint in an argument.
- 15. Persuasive appeal that targets emotions.
- 16. Words or phrases that connect ideas in an argument.
- 17. A punctuation mark used for emphasis or additional information.
Down
- 1. A punctuation mark used to connect two closely related independent clauses.
- 2. Facts, statistics, examples, or quotes that support a claim.
- 3. A list of all sources used in a paper, placed on a separate page at the end of the essa or phrases that connect ideas in an argument.
- 4. Explanation of how evidence connects back to the claim.
- 6. Type of evidence that is trustworthy and reliable.
- 7. Persuasive appeal based on the author's credibility or trustworthiness.
- 10. How the author addresses or refutes the opposing viewpoint.
- 12. Persuasive appeal based on logic, facts, and reasoning.
- 14. Correct format for crediting a source inside a sentence.
- 15. Verb tense showing ongoing or continuous action.