Native American and Revolutionary Jeopardy
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Transcript of Native American and Revolutionary Jeopardy
Native American and Revolutionary Jeopardy
Native American or
Revolutionary
Ethos, Logos, Pathos
Who dat?(author)
Rationalism Writing
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An appeal to credibility
Ethos
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“Give me liberty, or give me death!”
Pathos
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State is the proper instrument of progress
Revolutionary
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Used myths to explain how natural events occured
Native American
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A thesis stament should include these two things.
a position with supporting reasons
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“No pains without gains”
Benjamin Franklin
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“These are the times that try men’s souls”
Thomas Paine
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“Crisis No.1”
Thomas Paine
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Started as oral tradition
Native American
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What is the most important thing you must NEVER do in a
persuasive paper?
Present both sides of an argument
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The 18th Century is also known as the Age of ______.
Enlightenment/ Reason
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During the Revolutionary period, American is no longer a
new___; it is a new ____.
Eden/ Rome
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Deists compare God to a ____.
Watchmaker
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Many persuasive speeches
Revolutionary
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Daily Double
Aphorisms
Benjamin Franklin
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Which text contains aphorisms?
“Poor Richard’s Almanac”
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They are meant for us. They can be meant
for no other.
logos
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“Speech to the Virginia Convention”
Patrick Henry
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The Revolutionary period focuses less on religion and more on _____.
Science
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Where can one find a thesis statement in a persuasive
research paper?
Last sentence in the first paragraph
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Appeal to Emotion
Pathos
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“An appeal to logic”
Logos
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All of your topic sentence and body paragraphs must connect
back to your _____..
Thesis Statement
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Used nature as setting
Native American
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Using opposing information in
building an argument is called a
________.
Counterargument
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