Quarantine Crossword
Across
- 3. Ordinary language; the vernacularsyntax: The way in which linguistic elements (such as words) are put together to form constituents (such as phrases or clauses
- 4. A quality, feeling, or attitude expressed by the words a speaker or writer uses
- 7. The person/people to whom an appeal is made in an argument
- 8. The controversy, event, etc. about which an argument is being made
- 10. We are stuck in our houses due to
- 12. An inclination of temperament or outlook; a personal and sometimes unreasoned judgment
- 14. The way in which information is organized within a piece or writing or argumentation; also on the use of punctuation and other visual devices.
- 17. The rhetorical art of seizing the occasion; it covers timing and the appropriate medium; in ancient Greece, this was referred to as kairos
- 19. a reason or set of reasons given with the aim of persuading others that an action or idea is right or wrong.
- 20. What is a fish with no eyes
- 21. 11th grade won this
Down
- 1. What has four chairs and a back but can’t walk
- 2. Buy it to eat, but you don’t eat it
- 3. A claim made to rebut a previous claim
- 5. Fact/research/knowledge based ideas which are stated in support of an assertion or theme
- 6. Word choice; especially with regard to correctness, clearness, or effectiveness
- 9. 20 seconds is the perfect amount to____ your hands
- 11. To put forward one’s opinion, evaluation or suggestion; to point out weaknesses in the conceded premise, evidence, or point of view; to deny false implications or assumptions.
- 13. The person delivering a message or argument; when considering a speaker one should consider the credibility of the said individual in relationship to his/her audience and topic
- 14. what can you break without touching
- 15. Pointing out the similarities between two things or ideas which often don’t appear to be similar at first glance; in rhetoric this often takes the form of a metaphor, simile, or analogy.
- 16. What gets wetter as it dries
- 18. Two things or ideas being seen or placed close together with contrasting effect; in rhetoric this often takes the form of antithesis.