AP Notes 281-300 Flashcards
V-to make worse or more severe
Exacerbate
Adj-harmful, injurious
Noxious
When one kind of sensory stimulus evokes the subjective experience of another. Seeing red fire ants makes you itchy. Refer to Red Hot Chili Peppers Taste the Pain
Synesthesia
A declaration that is made emphatically as if no supporting evidence were necessary
Assertion
A literary device used by writer for a prominent character in a play or book that has characteristic opposite to a conventional hero. The protagonist is generally admired for his bravery, strength, charm, or ingenuity, while typically clumsy, unsolicited, unskilled, and has good and bad qualities.
Dexter is a good example
Anti-Hero
Adj-harmful, injurious
Noxious
When one kind of sensory stimulus evokes the subjective experience of another. Seeing red fire ants makes you itchy. Refer to Red Hot Chili Peppers Taste the Pain
Synesthesia
A declaration that is made emphatically as if no supporting evidence were necessary
Assertion
A literary device used by writer for a prominent character in a play or book that has characteristic opposite to a conventional hero. The protagonist is generally admired for his bravery, strength, charm, or ingenuity, while typically clumsy, unsolicited, unskilled, and has good and bad qualities.
Dexter is a good example
Anti-Hero
Adj-harmful, injurious
Noxious
When one kind of sensory stimulus evokes the subjective experience of another. Seeing red fire ants makes you itchy. Refer to Red Hot Chili Peppers Taste the Pain
Synesthesia
A declaration that is made emphatically as if no supporting evidence were necessary
Assertion
A literary device used by writer for a prominent character in a play or book that has characteristic opposite to a conventional hero. The protagonist is generally admired for his bravery, strength, charm, or ingenuity, while typically clumsy, unsolicited, unskilled, and has good and bad qualities.
Dexter is a good example
Anti-Hero
An element of a culture or system of behavior that may be considered to be passed from one individual to another by non-genetic means, especially imitation; a humorous image, video, piece of text, etc., that is copied (often with slight variation) and spread rapidly by internet users.
Meme
Writing or any type of writing for that, there are three types of claims a writer can make. These 3 are claims of fact, value, and policy. We will look at each separately. It is important to identify these in the writing of others (especially rhetorical and synthesis) and to use them appropriately in your own writing in the synthesis and argumentative writing on the AP exam.
Types of “Claims” in argument
Existence of something/definition or classification interferences about past, present, or future
Types of factual claim (generally objective)
- factual/historical
- relational-casual connection
- predictive
Prop for this type of claim require: 1- sufficient and appropriate grounds a) reliability b) recent data c) accurate, typical data d) clearly defined terms-no loaded language
2- a clear distinction between fact and interference.
Claims of Fact
(Tastes and morals) and such claims then to make value judgements, resolves conflicts between values/quasi policy (meaning the rights or appropriateness of it;) relative merits, etc. the proof for such claim is not as solid as “claims of fact”
a) establish their own standards of evaluation (ie, a warrant that defines what constitutes instances of relevant value) As such, the writer defines good, bad, and not much room for rebuttal
b) note the priority of their established value
c) establish the value or advantage
d) use examples to clarify abstract values
e) use credible authority for support
Claims of Value