Speech 1110- Final- Noelle Anderson
(Ch. 18) What is the type of speaking that pays tribute to a person, a group of people, an institution, or an idea? ___ speaking
commemorative (speaking)
(Ch. 16) What are the 3 basic issues for analyzing questions of policy? ___, ___, and ___
need, plan, practicality
(Ch. 13) What is a carefully prepared and rehearsed speech that is presented from a brief set of notes? ___ speech
Extemporaneous (speech)
(Ch. 6) What are the questions that offer a fixed choice between two or more alternatives? ___ ___ questions
Fixed alternative
(Ch. 16) What is the method of organizing persuasive speeches that seek immediate action? 5 steps of motivated sequence: attention, need, satisfaction, visualization, and action. ___ ___ ___
Monroe's Motivated Sequence (Be able to apply this knowledge to examples)
(Ch. 7) What are the 3 types of databases? ___, ___, and ___
Newspaper, periodical, academic
(Ch. 7) ___ ___ ___ is an academic database that is useful for finding information in scholarly journals
academic search complete
(Ch. 17) What is the fallacy that attacks the person rather than dealing with the real issue in dispute? ___ ___
ad hominem
(Ch. 12) What is the repetition of the initial consonant sound of close or adjoining words? ___
alliteration
(Ch. 17) What is the reasoning in which a speaker compares 2 similar cases and infers that what is true for the first case is also true for the second? ___ reasoning
analogical (reasoning)
(Ch. 12) What compares two similar cases and infers that what is true for one case is also true for the other? ___
analogy
(Ch. 13) When you formulate answers to possible questions and practice the delivery of your answers you are preparing to ___ ___ ___
answer audience questions
(Ch. 12) What is the juxtaposition of contrasting ideas, usually in paralleled structure? ___
antithesis
(Ch. 13) What is the physical production of speech sounds? ___
articulation
The 5 steps of Monroe's Motivated Sequence are ___, ___, ___, ___, and ___
attention, need, satisfaction, visualization, action
(Ch. 7) What are the 3 criteria for judging the reliability of Internet documents? ___, ___ , and ___
authorship, sponsorship, recency
(Ch. 8) What is a specific case referred to in passing to illustrate a point? ___ ___
brief example
(Ch. 8) What are the 3 different types of examples? ___, ___, and ___
brief, extended, hypothetical
(Ch. 17) What is the reasoning that seeks to establish the relationship between causes and effects? ___ reasoning
causal (reasoning)
(Ch. 17) How an audience regards a speaker's sincerity, trustworthiness, and concern for the well-being of the audience is called ___
character
(Ch. 17) How an audience regards a speaker's intelligence, expertise, and knowledge of the subject is called ___
competence
(Ch. 12) What is the meaning suggested by the associations or emotions triggered by a word or phrase? ___ language
connotative (language)
(Ch. 13) What is presenting a speech so it sounds spontaneous no matter how many times it has been rehearsed? ___ ___
conversational quality
(Ch. 12) What is the literal or dictionary meaning of a word or phrase? ___ language
denotative (language)
(Ch. 17) What is the credibility of a speaker produced by everything she or he says and does during the speech? ___ credibility
derived
(Ch. 6) What is the tendency of people to be concerned above all with their own values, beliefs, and well-being? ___
egocentrism
(Ch. 17) What are the 4 methods for generating emotional appeal? Use ___ language, ___ examples and speak with ___ and ___
emotional , vivid, sincerity, conviction
(Ch. 16) Audiences are persuaded by speakers through the use of ___, ___, and ___/___
evidence, credibility, reasoning, logic
(Ch. 8) What are testimonies from people who are recognized experts in their fields called? ___ testimonies
expert (testimonies)
(Ch. 8) What is a story, narrative, or anecdote developed at some length to illustrate a point? ___ ___
extended example
(Ch. 16) What is the question about the truth or falsity of an assertion? Question of ___
fact (Be able to apply this knowledge to examples)
(Ch. 17) What is an error in reasoning called? ___
fallacy
(Ch. 17) What is the fallacy in which a speaker mistakenly assumes that because one event follows another, the first event is the cause of the second? ___ ___
false cause
(Ch. 12) How does Language shape our sense of reality? By ___ ___ to ___
giving means, events
(Ch. 13) ___ ___ ___ has a conversational quality and doesn't call attention to itself/speaker in an obnoxious way
good speech delivery
(Ch. 17) What is the fallacy in which a speaker jumps to a general conclusion on the basis of insufficient evidence? ___ ___
hasty generalization
(Ch. 8) What is an example that describes an imaginary or fictitious situation? ___ ___
hypothetical example
(Ch. 12) What is the use of vivid language to create mental images of objects, actions, or ideas? ___
imagery
(Ch. 16) What is the persuasive speech in which the speaker's goal is to convince the audience that a given policy is desirable and encourages the audience to take action in support of the policy? ___ ___ speech
immediate action (speech)
(Ch. 17) What is the credibility of a speaker before she or he starts to speak? ___ credibility
initial
(Ch. 6) What are the 3 primary factors of assessing an audience's disposition toward a topic? ___, ___, and ___
knowledge, interest, attitude
(Ch. 12) What is an implicit comparison, not introduced with the word"like" or "as" between two things that are essentially different yet have something in common? ___
metaphor
(Ch. 13) What is the communication based on a person's use of voice and body, rather than on the use of words? ___ communication
nonverbal (communication)
(Ch. 6) What are the questions that allow respondents to answer however they want? ___ ___ questions
open ended
(Ch. 8) Elements of ___ ___ includes the date, source, and credibility
oral citations
(Ch. 12) What is the similar arrangement of a pair or series of related words, phrases, or sentences? ___
parallelism
(Ch.2) To restate or summarize an author's ideas in one's own words is called? ___
paraphrasing
(Ch. 16) What is the persuasive speech in which the speaker's goal is to convince the audience that a given policy is desirable without encouraging the audience to take action in support of the policy? ___ ___ speech
passive agreement (speech)
(Ch. 8) What are testimonies from ordinary people with firsthand experience or insight on a topic called? ___ testimonies
peer (testimonies)
(Ch. 16) What is the process of creating, reinforcing, or changing people's beliefs or actions? ___
persuasion
(Ch. 16) What is a question about whether a specific course of action should or should not be taken? Question of ___
policy (Be able to apply this knowledge to examples)
(Ch. 17) What is the process of drawing a conclusion on the basis of evidence? ___
reasoning
(Ch. 17) What is the fallacy that introduces an irrelevant issue to divert attention from the subject under discussion? ___ ___
red herring
(Ch. 13) To practice your speech delivery you can ___ it in front of friends/family and have them ___ you
rehearse, critique
(Ch. 7) Taking Research Notes- As you do ___ for your speeches, be sure to use ___ ___ whenever you copy the exact words of a source. If you paraphrase, rather than quote verbatim, don't forget to include the ___ when you record the note
research, quotation marks, source
(Ch. 12) What is the pattern of sound in a speech created by the chance and arrangement of words? ___
rhythm
(Ch. 6) What are the questions that require responses at fixed intervals along a scale of answers? ___ questions
scale
(Ch. 12) What is an explicit comparison introduced with the words "like" or "as" between things that are essentially different yet have something in common? ___
simile
(Ch. 6) What is the audience analysis that focuses on factors such as the size of the audience, the physical setting for the speech, and the disposition of the audience toward the topic, the speaker, and the occasion? ___ audience analysis
situational (audience analysis)
(Ch. 17) Tips for using evidence: use ___ evidence, ___ evidence, evidence from ___ ___, and state it ___
specific, novel, credible sources, clearly
(Ch. 6) The primary purpose of ___ is to gain a desired ___ from listeners
speechmaking, response
(Ch. 8) What is numerical data? ___
statistics
(Ch. 17) What is the credibility of a speaker at the end of the speech? ___ credibility
terminal
(Ch. 8) Quotations or paraphrases used to support a point are called? ___
testimonies
(Ch. 16) What is the questions about the worth, rightness, morality, and so forth of an idea or action? Question of ___
value (Be able to apply this knowledge to examples)
(Ch. 12) Some examples of ___ ___ are imagery, similes, metaphors, cliche, rhythm, and parallelism
vivid language
(Ch.1) "um" or "uh" filler words serve as a ___ ___
vocalized pause