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What You Say? Say What, Again? REV- O-Lu- tionary Tantalizing Terms

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Presentation on theme: "What You Say? Say What, Again? REV- O-Lu- tionary Tantalizing Terms"— Presentation transcript:

1 What You Say? Say What, Again? REV- O-Lu- tionary Tantalizing Terms Marvelous Metaphors Symbols, You Say? 100 200 300 400 500 200 100 300 400 500 200 100 300 400 500 200 100 300 400 500 200 100 300 400 500 200 100 300 400 500

2 REV-O-Lu-tionary – 100 These are two of the other names for the Revolutionary Period.

3 What are Enlightenment, Age of Reason, Rationalists, Neoclassic?

4 REV-O-Lu-tionary– 200 This is the Revolutionary Period attitude toward emotion.

5 What is a weakness or a distraction?

6 REV-O-Lu-tionary– This is the characteristic of a person that was prized as a heroic trait in the Revolutionary Era.

7 What is being well-educated?

8 REV-O-Lu-tionary– This is the attitude people in the Revolutionary Period had about their future or the future of civilization.

9 What is believing that all things could eventually be scientifically or rationally explained or discovered?

10 REV-O-Lu-tionary– This was one of the institutions of civilization that Revolutionary Era people believed they were perfecting to a higher level than it had existed before.

11 What is government?

12 Marvelous Metaphors – This is one of the Revolutionary Era authors who used the metaphor of slavery in his ideas.

13 Who is Henry, Jefferson, or Paine?

14 Marvelous Metaphors – This is the metaphor Patrick Henry used to demonstrate to his listeners that troubles with the British were growing and would soon sweep southward toward them.

15 What is a storm or gale?

16 Marvelous Metaphors – This is a metaphoric allusion that Patrick Henry uses to convince his audience that the British are false in their friendly words because their actions demonstrate their betrayal of the colonial people’s trust.

17 What is “suffer not yourselves to be betrayed with a kiss”?

18 Marvelous Metaphors – This is a metaphoric allusion that Patrick Henry uses to demonstrate to his listeners that being guided by one’s experiences in the past is as trustworthy as being guided by holy scriptures.

19 What is “I have but one lamp by which my feet are guided, and that is the lamp of experience”?

20 Marvelous Metaphors – This is the writer who exclaims: “Our chains are forged! Their clanking may be heard on the plains of Boston!”.

21 Who is Patrick Henry?

22 Tantalizing Terms – 100 This is ethos.

23 What is an attempt to demonstrate trustworthiness or credibility?

24 Tantalizing Terms – 200 This is pathos.

25 What is the use of emotion or the idea of wringing emotion from an audience when trying to persuade them of something?

26 Tantalizing Terms – 300 This is logos.

27 What is using evidence or reasoning to convince an audience that the conclusion you want them to agree with is correct?

28 Tantalizing Terms – 400 The is ad hominem.

29 What is trying to distract from an argument by trying to discredit a person’s character?

30 Tantalizing Terms – 500 This is a syllogism.

31 What is using an idea that everyone agrees to and evidence to convince an audience that the logic of an argument is correct?

32 Symbols, You Say? – 100 This is what Prince Prospero represents.

33 What is wealthy people, trying to hide from reality and death?

34 Symbols, You Say? – 200 This is what the clock represents in “Masque of the Red Death.”

35 What is time and fears about the end of life?

36 Symbols, You Say? – 300 This is what the seven rooms represent in Prince Prosepero’s abbey.

37 What is the various stages of life?

38 Symbols, You Say? – 400 This is what the abbey represents in “Masque of the Red Death.”

39 What are the restrictions that keep poor people away from wealthy people?

40 Symbols, You Say? – 500 This is what the people at Prince Prospero’s abbey represent.

41 What are the people who blindly follow others in society rather than thinking for themselves OR the people who pretend together that they can cheat death or avoid pain in life?

42 What You Say? – 100 This is the person who wrote: “Give me liberty or give me death”.

43 Who is Patrick Henry?

44 What You Say? – 200 This is the person who wrote: “We hold these truths to be self-evident”.

45 Who is Thomas Jefferson?

46 What You Say? – 300 This is the person who wrote: “That government is best which governs the least”.

47 Who is Henry David Thoreau?

48 What You Say? – 400 This is the person who wrote: “Envy is ignorance”.

49 Who is Ralph Waldo Emerson?

50 What You Say? – This is the person who wrote: “Nothing is at last sacred but the integrity of your own mind”.

51 Who is Ralph Waldo Emerson?

52 Say What, Again? – This is the person who wrote about a “happy and dauntless and sagacious” person with “eccentric yet august taste”.

53 Who is Edgar Allan Poe?

54 Say What, Again? – This is the person who wrote: “It matters not how small the beginning may seem to be: what is once done well is done forever.”

55 Who is Henry David Thoreau?

56 Say What, Again? – 300 This is the person who wrote: “To be great is to be misunderstood.”

57 Who is Ralph Waldo Emerson?

58 Say What, Again? – This is the person who wrote: “These are the times that try men’s souls. The summer soldier and the sunshine patriot will, in this crisis, shrink from the service of their country…”.

59 Who is Thomas Paine?

60 Say What, Again? – This is the person who wrote: “If there must be trouble, let it be in my day, that my child may have peace.”

61 Who is Thomas Paine?

62 FINAL JEOPARDY

63 Make a Jeopardy question from LINCOLN’s speech to stump your opponents.


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