Hosted by Ms. Gharda 100 200 400 300 400 Time TravelPathos, Ethos, or Logos? Go Figure! 300 200 400...

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Time Travel Pathos, Ethos, or Logos? Go Figure!

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Point of View

Row 1, Col 1

A religious belief which included Original Sin and predestination.

What is Puritanism?

1,2

Writers of this era emphasizedemotion over reason.

What is Romanticism?

1,3

Writers of this literary periodpreferred portraying thingsas they actually were more than things as they might be.

What is realism?

1,4

Writers who wrote in this veinhad a grim view of life, as battle with natural forces outto get us.

What is naturalism?

1,5

Writers of this subset of this literary period looked to natureas an escape and source ofDivine truth.

What is transcendentalism in Romanticism?

2,1

When Abigail stops Mary Warrenfrom exposing her as a fraud byleading the girls in accusationsthat she’s enchanting them.

What is pathos?

2,2

When Abigail runs away just asher word is beginning to get questioned in the courts, one canonly assume that she wasn’ttelling the truth, destroyingthis element in her argument.

What is ethos?

2,3

When you study and ace a test, you conclude that studying pays off. This line of argumentcreates this.

What is logos?

2,4

If a person argues against slaveryby providing horrifying detailsof the suffering experienced under its institution, they are using this.

What is pathos?

2,5

When someone arguing about the need to make laws prohibitingdrinking and driving talks abouttheir own knowledge because of their visits with families who havelost loved ones in drunk driving incidents, it gives them this.

What is ethos?

3,1

What is first-person?

Since the story about how Frederick Douglass stood up to Mr. Covey is narrated from his own personal perspective, it can be said to be written from this point of view.

3,2

Jonathan Edwards talks to directly to us abouthow we are hanging on a string over a devouringflames below and only God’s mercy keeps usfrom falling, using this point of view.

What is second-person?

3,3

The story of Coyote, the Native American trickster, is told by someone not involved in the actual events, which means it is narrated through this point of view.

What is third-person?

3,4

What is dramatic irony?

Our point of view becomes important when this is used as we know that Elizabeth should not protect her husband from people knowing about his adultery.

3, 5

This term has to do with the attitudethe writer has towards his/her subject.

What is tone?

4,1

The great black forest—stern as it showed itself to those who brought the guilt and troublesof the world into its bosom—became the playmate of the lonely infant, as well as it knew how.

What is personification?

4,2

“The wrath of God is like great waters that are dammed for the present; they increase more andmore, and rise higher and higher, till an outlet is given; and the longerthe stream is stopped, the more rapid and mighty is its course…”

What is a simile?

4,3

“…poor little Pearl was a demonoffspring”

What is a metaphor?

4,4

“The God that holds you over the pit of hell, much as one holds a spider, or some loathsome insect over the fire…”

What is a simile?

4,5

In addition to simile, this quoteutilizes this figure of speech:“Arthur Dimmesdale put forth his hand, chill as death…”

What is hyperbole?