English 10 Final Exam Review

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