EAPP Reviewer Part 1

A visually engaging illustration of a person studying with books and notes on argumentation, surrounded by symbols of logic and reasoning, vibrant colors, modern style.

EAPP Knowledge Quiz

Test your understanding of essential concepts in English for Academic and Professional Purposes (EAPP) with this engaging quiz! Dive deep into key terms, argumentation strategies, and reasoning fallacies.

Stay sharp and enhance your skills with:

  • 20 thought-provoking questions
  • Immediate feedback on your answers
  • Insights into argumentation and critical thinking

20 Questions5 MinutesCreated by AnalyzingEagle47
Generally refers to something that is true and can be verified.
It refers to a personal belief.
Is used to establish the writer as fair, open-minded, honest, and knowledgeable about the subject matter.
Is a document publicly declaring the position or program of its issuer.
Is defined as a reason or reasoning given for or against a matter under discussion.
A view or judgment formed about something.
Is the strategic use of logic, claims, and evidence to convince an audience of a certain point.
Is a mode of persuasion that relies on descriptive, sensory language and imagery to evoke an emotional response and convince an audience of an argument.
Are common errors in reasoning that will undermine the logic of your argument.
Occurs when an arguer presents his/her argument as one of only two options despite the presence of multiple possibilities.
- Occurs when something is instantly concluded to be true just because it is not proven to be false, and vice versa.
Occurs when someone makes a claim about a series of events that would lead to one major event, usually a bad event.
Is argumentation using force or the threat of force to convince others to accept an argument's conclusion.
A fallacy in which someone tries to win support for an argument or idea by exploiting one's opponent's feelings of pity or guilt. It is a specific kind of appeal to emotion.
Occurs when unpleasant consequences of believing something are pointed out to show that the belief is false.
Occurs when an argument is considered to be valid because it is what the majority thinks.
Occurs when someone tries to refute an argument by attacking the character of a person instead of attacking the ideas of the argument.
Occurs when arguments contradict one another
Any argument of the form: If A is true then B is true; If A is not true then B is not true.
It is an informal fallacy that states: “Since event A followed event B, event A must have been caused by event B
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