English 101 final exam
example of comma splice
The dancers were beautiful, they were well coordinated.
what is kairos?
The perfect moment to deliver the text and fits the time of the argument
what is a fragment?
an incomplete idea
What is a comma splice?
an incorrect usage of a comma, typically with a sentence that needs a semicolon, to be put into two sentences, or needs coordinating words with a comma for it to make grammatical sense
what's another name for the rhetorical appeals?
artistic appeal
where should in-text citations appear?
at the end of a sentence
rhetoric's connection or impact in your life
define rhetoric and how it impacts your life(being able to recognize, analyze, and respond to a situation with communication)
what did Aristotle consider the most important rhetorical appeal?
ethos because of credibility
what are the 3 rhetorical appeals?
ethos, pathos, logos
define ethos, logos, and pathos
ethos: credibility pathos: emotion logos: logistics and facts
what is an intro's main goal?
exigency, scope, and thesis
if there is no author, what should be in your in-text citation?
first few words of the article title
logos is the appeal to logic, but must it be factual, or should it appeal to the audience?
it appeals to logic but also the audience's sense of reason or logic
why is paraphrasing better than direct quoting at times?
it shows clear understanding, and does not interrupt the flow, it condenses the information
what two places does ethos come from in your paper?
me and the sources used
what is the difference between medium and mode?
medium- the way it is received mode-how the audience receives the message
can physical spaces be persuasive?
no
do all writers follow the same writing process?
no
define exigency.
o urgency/ focused need; more defined (why we respond the way we do)
define rhetorical genre.
phrase to describe a category of rhetoric(shaped by and shaping context)
what does PIE stand for?
point, illustration, explanation
what is the difference between a summary and a paraphrase?
summary: shorter than original paraphrase: same length as original
define rhetoric.
the wide array of communicative devices humans have at their disposal to create effects on each other
what is a run-on sentence?
two complete ideas strung together with no punctuation
what do you do if you need to change a word or phrase within a quote?
use brackets
what is a claim?
what you want to convince your audience of (your position)
is it plagiarism if you use your own words but copy the sentence structure?
yes
should we always consider the timeliness of our responses when writing?
yes
what does effective research start from?
-entering an established community -understanding how and why we use sources -recognize motives
why do we use citations when writing?
-to signal belonging to an academic community -to signal the validity of the ideas -to provide readers with the ability to read further into the topic if they want
example of fragment
Dr. Holt with his fuzzy slippers.
example of run-on sentence
I love to write papers I would write one every day if I could.