lauren kight pd.1
DESCRIPTION
Lauren Kight Pd.1. PSSA HELP!!. Hasty Generalization. To jump to the easiest, quickest, most obvious conclusion without enough examples to support it. Red Herring. Something that draws attention away from the central issue. Appeal to Fear. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
![Page 1: Lauren Kight Pd.1](https://reader030.vdocument.in/reader030/viewer/2022032414/56813419550346895d9b0607/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
• PSSA HELP!!
Lauren Kight Pd.1
![Page 2: Lauren Kight Pd.1](https://reader030.vdocument.in/reader030/viewer/2022032414/56813419550346895d9b0607/html5/thumbnails/2.jpg)
Hasty Generalization • To jump to the easiest,
quickest, most obvious conclusion without enough examples to support it
![Page 3: Lauren Kight Pd.1](https://reader030.vdocument.in/reader030/viewer/2022032414/56813419550346895d9b0607/html5/thumbnails/3.jpg)
Red Herring
• Something that draws attention away from the central issue.
![Page 4: Lauren Kight Pd.1](https://reader030.vdocument.in/reader030/viewer/2022032414/56813419550346895d9b0607/html5/thumbnails/4.jpg)
Appeal to Fear
• a fallacy in which a person attempts to create support for his or her idea by increasing fear and prejudice toward a competitor.
![Page 5: Lauren Kight Pd.1](https://reader030.vdocument.in/reader030/viewer/2022032414/56813419550346895d9b0607/html5/thumbnails/5.jpg)
False Cause
• informal fallacy which is committed when an argument assumes a causal relationship without sufficient grounds.
![Page 6: Lauren Kight Pd.1](https://reader030.vdocument.in/reader030/viewer/2022032414/56813419550346895d9b0607/html5/thumbnails/6.jpg)
Bandwagon
• A cause or party that attracts increasing numbers of adherents
![Page 7: Lauren Kight Pd.1](https://reader030.vdocument.in/reader030/viewer/2022032414/56813419550346895d9b0607/html5/thumbnails/7.jpg)
Prefixes
• Re - again, back
• Un – not/reversal or cancellation of action or state
•Mis - bad, badly
•De - down, away •Dis - apart, not
![Page 8: Lauren Kight Pd.1](https://reader030.vdocument.in/reader030/viewer/2022032414/56813419550346895d9b0607/html5/thumbnails/8.jpg)
Suffixes
• Able - able, can do • Ous - full of• Ment - act of, result • Ness - state of • Ful - full of
![Page 9: Lauren Kight Pd.1](https://reader030.vdocument.in/reader030/viewer/2022032414/56813419550346895d9b0607/html5/thumbnails/9.jpg)
fallacy
• A false or erroneous idea.
![Page 10: Lauren Kight Pd.1](https://reader030.vdocument.in/reader030/viewer/2022032414/56813419550346895d9b0607/html5/thumbnails/10.jpg)
Denotation
• The exact, literal dictionary definition of a word.
Ex.) The denotation of the word home is simply "a place where one lives"
![Page 11: Lauren Kight Pd.1](https://reader030.vdocument.in/reader030/viewer/2022032414/56813419550346895d9b0607/html5/thumbnails/11.jpg)
irony
• method of expression in which the ordinary meaning of a word or situation is the opposite of the thought in the speaker's mind; when the opposite of what you expect to happen occurs.
![Page 12: Lauren Kight Pd.1](https://reader030.vdocument.in/reader030/viewer/2022032414/56813419550346895d9b0607/html5/thumbnails/12.jpg)
parody
• humorous imitation of a serious writing; to make fun of something by copying it. A parody follows the form of the original.
![Page 13: Lauren Kight Pd.1](https://reader030.vdocument.in/reader030/viewer/2022032414/56813419550346895d9b0607/html5/thumbnails/13.jpg)
sarcasm
• bitter, cutting remarks intended to hurt someone's feelings.
![Page 14: Lauren Kight Pd.1](https://reader030.vdocument.in/reader030/viewer/2022032414/56813419550346895d9b0607/html5/thumbnails/14.jpg)
exaggeration
• to stretch the truth, make something seem better or worse that it really is. Hyperbole, a exaggerated ridiculous comparison for effect, can also be used.
![Page 15: Lauren Kight Pd.1](https://reader030.vdocument.in/reader030/viewer/2022032414/56813419550346895d9b0607/html5/thumbnails/15.jpg)
Ridicule
• To make fun of something.
![Page 16: Lauren Kight Pd.1](https://reader030.vdocument.in/reader030/viewer/2022032414/56813419550346895d9b0607/html5/thumbnails/16.jpg)
Pun • a humorous use of a
word where it can have different meanings; a play on words with almost the same meaning.
There is only one way to open the door and that is the key.”
![Page 17: Lauren Kight Pd.1](https://reader030.vdocument.in/reader030/viewer/2022032414/56813419550346895d9b0607/html5/thumbnails/17.jpg)
allusion
• a reference to a person, a place or event from a word of literature, myth, the Bible, history, sports, science, the arts, etc.
![Page 18: Lauren Kight Pd.1](https://reader030.vdocument.in/reader030/viewer/2022032414/56813419550346895d9b0607/html5/thumbnails/18.jpg)
satire
• using irony, sarcasm, ridicule, etc. in a literary composition to hold human vices, weaknesses, etc. up to ridicule; the author's purpose is to to encourage the correction of the weakness, etc.
![Page 19: Lauren Kight Pd.1](https://reader030.vdocument.in/reader030/viewer/2022032414/56813419550346895d9b0607/html5/thumbnails/19.jpg)
Tips• Wake up
• Eat the crappy breakfast the school gives to you
• Listen to the crappy lectures they give you
• Go to testing room
• Listen to the teacher read the same directions everyday
• DO NOT FALL ASLEEP
(this might be really hard but just try to deal)
• Go to get extra time to avoid your boring 4th period class
• Have a nice rest of the day