Speech and Debate
Across
- 3. (v.) To provide evidence, facts, or reasoning that bolsters the validity of a claim.
- 4. (n.) A statement or proposition that serves as the basis for an argument's conclusion.
- 9. (adj.) Based on facts and evidence, rather than personal feelings or opinions.
- 10. (n.)The final point or judgment reached by reasoning through the provided evidence.
- 12. (n.) Acknowledging the validity of a point made by the opposing side in an argument.
- 14. (v.) To limit or modify a claim, acknowledging conditions under which it may not apply.
- 15. (n.) The often unstated logical connection that justifies using particular evidence for a claim.
Down
- 1. (n.)A statement that opposes or challenges the main claim being presented.
- 2. (n.) An underlying belief or principle that is taken for granted without explicit proof.
- 5. (v.) To prove a statement or argument to be wrong or false through logical reasoning and evidence.
- 6. (n.)Factual information, data, or expert opinions used to support the validity of a claim.
- 7. (n.) A debatable statement that asserts a particular stance or belief about a topic.
- 8. (n.) The logical links and explanations that connect the evidence to the claim.
- 11. (n.) A response that defends the original claim by addressing and disproving the counterclaim.
- 13. (n.)A flaw in reasoning that weakens or invalidates an argument's logical structure.