Across
- 2. The people who will read the author's piece and will, hopefully, support the author's claim.
- 5. Logical thinking to explain how/why the evidence supports the claim.
- 7. The expected objection to the writer's claim.
- 9. The writer acknowledges the opposing claim by presenting reasoning or facts to disprove it.
- 10. This type of evidence is not necessary to prove the claim.
- 11. The use of feelings and emotions to appeal to the reader.
- 12. The use of trust to appeal to the reader.
Down
- 1. The reason why the author is writing the piece.
- 3. The writer's position on the issue or topic presented in the prompt.
- 4. The use of logic and thinking to appeal to the reader.
- 6. Information from the text or a credible source that backs up a claim.
- 8. This type of evidence it important and necessary to support the claim.
