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Vocabulary Test: Ch 4 Ohio HistoryWords:The American Revolution, Lord Dunmore's War , The Proclamation of 1763:, The French and Indian War, The Treaty of Greenville, The Battle of Fallen Timbers, The Northwest Ordinance, The Treaty of Paris
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Vocabulary Test: United States History Chapters 18-20Words:Aaron Montogomery Ward, Adam Smith, Calamity Jane, Casey Jones, Chief Joseph, Cornelius Vanderbilt, Edwin L. Drake, Frances Willard, Francis Bellamy, George Armstrong Custer, George Peabody, George Pullman, George Washington Carver, Henry Bessemer, J.P. Morgan , James J. Hill, James Whitcomb Riley, Jane Adams, Jay Gould , Joel Chandler Harris, John A. Roebling, John S. Pillsbury , Joseph Glidden, Joseph Pulitzer, Lew Wallace, Louis Sullivan, P.T. Barnum, Paul Bunyan, Red Cloud, Samuel Gompers , Samuel Langhorne Clemens, Sheldon Jackson, Sitting Bull, William Speer, George Westinghouse , Helen Hunt Jackson, Thomas Edison, Mark Twain
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Vocabulary Test: rishiWords:prefix, suffix, illustration, feature, mystery , fantasy, realistic fiction, historical ficition, science fiction, folktale
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Vocabulary Test: ReallythanksformakingthiswebsiteitshelpfulalotWords:Mumbo Jumbo, Long in the Tooth, If its not one thing, it's another, It takes two to tango, Hit the books, Hocus Pocus, Southpaw, Rise and Shine, Wear your heart on your sleeve, Hell in a basket, Cast-iron stomach, Shrinking violet
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Vocabulary Test: The Lightning Thief Chapter 2 Crossword PuzzleWords:occasional, hallucination, perky, irritable, obnoxious, ajar, solstice, resolved, ignorance, trickled, eavesdropping, smirked, destined, dreaded, fidgety, assumed, glumly, twitching, mumbled, mournfully
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Vocabulary Test: vocab hiWords:melancholy, medium, meander, mawkish, marginal, materialistic, mania, malapropism, melee, menagerie, larceny, lascivious, lavish, layman, liaison, licentious, limpid , listless, litany
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Vocabulary Test: Voodoo vs Hinduism quizWords:Is Voodoo the same as Vodun of Voudou?, What role did African slaves play in the creation of Voodoo, Give 2 examples of Voodoo in pop culture, What is Karma? and how is it simular and different to the beleif, Compare and Contrast Voodoo and Hinduism?, List 4 places where Voodoo is practiced, Which has more adherants Voodoo or Hindu, Summarize the presentation, What did you learn from this? (Note: Nothing is not an answer), What do Vodoo Adherents beleive in?, What do Hindu Adherents beleive in, What deity do Hindu Adherents follow?, Yes or No? (you have a 50/50 % chance of getting this right)
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Vocabulary Test: PHIL 200Words: 11. What is it for a set of statements to be inconsistent?, 10. What is it for a set of statements to be consistent?, 9. Can a sound deductive argument ever have a false conclusion? , 8. What is a sound deductive argument?, 7. Can a valid deductive argument have all false premises yet a , 6. Can a valid deductive argument ever have a false conclusion? , 5. What is a valid deductive argument?, 4. What is the key difference between an inductive argument and , 3. What is an inductive argument?, 2. What is a deductive argument?, 1. What is an argument? , 12. What is it for an inductive argument to be strong?, 13. What is it for an inductive inference to be strong?, 1. Define “critical thinking”, 2. What does it mean to say that critical thinking operates acco, 3. What is the sense in which critical thinking is broader than , 4. What is the sense in which being a critical thinker allows on, 5. What is a statement? (p. 9), 6. What are reasons?, 7. What is an argument?, 8. List some common premise indicators, 9. List some common conclusion indicators, 1. The most common impediments to critical thinking can be sorte, 2. What does the author mean by hindrances to critical thinking , 3. What is self-interested thinking? How can self-interested th, 4. What are some factors that might lead us to self-interested t, 5. How can the need to save face have on effect on the way we th, 6. What exactly is wrong with self-interested thinking?, 7. Tommy Morrison, former boxer, was diagnosed with HIV but late, 9. What is wrong with selectively paying attention to the eviden, 10. What is group pressure thinking? , 11. How is group pressure thinking an impediment to critical thi, 12. What is subjective relativism? , 13. How might accepting subjective relativism get in the way of , 14. What are two arguments the author gives for thinking that su, 15. What is social relativism?, 16. What are some arguments against social relativism?, 17. What is philosophical skepticism? , 18. What could lead someone to become a philosophical skeptic?, 19. How could being a philosophical skeptic get in the way of cr, 1. What is the point of making an argument?, 2. What is the point of evaluating an argument?, 3. Arguments come in two forms—deductive and inductive. How doe, 4. What is the difference between mere persuading and reasoning?, 5. What does it mean for a deductive argument to be valid?, 6. What does it mean for an inductive argument to be strong?, 7. What is it for an inductive argument to be cogent?, 8. What logical conclusion can you draw from the fact that a val, 9. What are the 4 steps we should take when we are trying to ide, 10. What is an implicit premise in an argument?, 11. What is a conditional statement? (p. 85), 12. What is the antecedent of a conditional statement?, 13. What is the consequent of a conditional statement?, 14. One pattern of reasoning is called, “affirming the anteceden, 15. What is denying the consequent or modus tollens? Provide an, 16. What is hypothetical syllogism?, 17. What is denying the antecedent? Is this type of reasoning v, 18. What is affirming the consequent? Is this type of reasoning, 1. What does it mean for two claims to conflict? , 2. What should we do with a claim if it comes in conflict with a, 3. What does the author mean by “background information”?, 4. Here is claim: Some babies can bench-press a five hundred po, 5. How does background information constrain the kinds of claims, 6. What does it mean to proportion of belief to the evidence?, 7. Why is it legitimate to rely on the information that comes fr, 8. Here is a principle: If a claim conflicts with expert opinio, 9. What is the fallacy known as “the appeal to authority”?, 10. Are medical doctors “experts”? Yes and no. Explain. , 11. What are some ways in which we might regard a non-expert as , 13. Tom Cruise famously claimed that psychiatry is a harmful pse, 14. What are two indicators of someone who is truly an expert in, 15. When our senses are impaired, we have reasons to doubt it. , 16. What does it mean to say that our perceptions and memory are, 17. The astronomer Schiaparelli reported observing canals in Mar, 1. Is personal experience reliable in revealing the truth? Expl, 2. What are some ways in which our perceptual powers can become , 3. What is the phenomenon known as pareidolia? (p.138), 4. How is seeing Jesus on a tortilla an instance of pareidolia?, 5. According to the author, if a class has 23 students, what are, 6. What is the gambler’s fallacy?, 7. What is the lesson we should take from the fact that we are s, 8. We are all guilty of fooling ourselves and not giving evidenc, 9. George W. Bush claims that he knew that the right thing to do, 10. What is confirmation bias? How can confirmation bias lead u, 11. What is the availability error? , 12. How is voting to convict a suspect because he looks menacing, 13. What is the error known as hasty generalization? , 14. How has the drive to maximize profit made print and televisi, hat is “passive reporting”? Why is this type of reporting not c, 16. In sorting out the news, we should look out for reporter sla, 17. We should always consider the source. Explain. , 18. We should check for missing information. Explain. , 19. We should look for false emphasis. Explain. , 20. In advertisement, we should look out for identification. Wh, 21. We should also look out for catchy slogans. Why?, 22. We should always look out for misleading comparisons. Provi, 1. What does it mean for a premise in an argument to be irreleva, 2. What is the origin fallacy?, 3. Provide an example of the origin fallacy., 4. What is the composition fallacy?, 5. Provide an example of the composition fallacy., 6. What is the division fallacy?, 7. Provide an example of the division fallacy., 8. What is the appeal to the person (or ad hominem) fallacy?, 9. Provide an example of the ad hominem., 10. What is the equivocation fallacy?, 11. Provide an example of the equivocation fallacy., 12. What is the appeal to popularity fallacy?, 13. Provide an example of this fallacy., 14. What is the appeal to tradition fallacy?, 15. What is the appeal to ignorance fallacy?, 16. What is the appeal to emotion fallacy?, 17. What is a red herring?, 18. What is the straw man fallacy?, 19. What is the two wrongs make a right fallacy?, 20. What is the begging the question fallacy?, 21. What is the false dilemma fallacy?, 22. What is the decision point fallacy?, 23. Why is a decision point argument fallacious?, 24. What is the slippery slope fallacy?, 25. What is the faulty analogy fallacy?, 1. What is rhetoric? , 2. How is rhetoric different from argumentation?, 3. What is an innuendo?, 4. What is a euphemism? Provide examples., 5. What is a dysphemism? Provide examples. , 6. What is a stereotype? , 7. What is ridicule? How can ridicule be used as a substitute f, 8. What is a rhetorical definition?, 9. What is a lexical definition?
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Vocabulary Test: Philosophy 200Words: 24. What is the slippery slope fallacy?, 23. Why is a decision point argument fallacious?, 22. What is the decision point fallacy?, 21. What is the false dilemma fallacy?, 20. What is the begging the question fallacy?, 19. What is the two wrongs make a right fallacy?, 18. What is the straw man fallacy?, 17. What is a red herring?, 16. What is the appeal to emotion fallacy?, 15. What is the appeal to ignorance fallacy?, 14. What is the appeal to tradition fallacy?, 13. Provide an example of this fallacy., 12. What is the appeal to popularity fallacy?, 11. Provide an example of the equivocation fallacy., 10. What is the equivocation fallacy?, 6. What is the division fallacy?, 7. Provide an example of the division fallacy., 8. What is the appeal to the person (or ad hominem) fallacy?, 9. Provide an example of the ad hominem., 4. What is the composition fallacy?, 5. Provide an example of the composition fallacy., 3. Provide an example of the origin fallacy., 1. What does it mean for a premise in an argument to be irreleva, 2. What is the origin fallacy?, 22. We should always look out for misleading comparisons. Provi, 21. We should also look out for catchy slogans. Why?, 20. In advertisement, we should look out for identification. Wh, 19. We should look for false emphasis. Explain. , 18. We should check for missing information. Explain. , 17. We should always consider the source. Explain. , 16. In sorting out the news, we should look out for reporter sla, hat is “passive reporting”? Why is this type of reporting not c, 14. How has the drive to maximize profit made print and televisi, 13. What is the error known as hasty generalization? , 12. How is voting to convict a suspect because he looks menacing, 11. What is the availability error? , 10. What is confirmation bias? How can confirmation bias lead u, 9. George W. Bush claims that he knew that the right thing to do, 8. We are all guilty of fooling ourselves and not giving evidenc, 7. What is the lesson we should take from the fact that we are s, 6. What is the gambler’s fallacy?, 5. According to the author, if a class has 23 students, what are, 4. How is seeing Jesus on a tortilla an instance of pareidolia?, 3. What is the phenomenon known as pareidolia? (p.138), 2. What are some ways in which our perceptual powers can become , 1. Is personal experience reliable in revealing the truth? Expl, 17. The astronomer Schiaparelli reported observing canals in Mar, 16. What does it mean to say that our perceptions and memory are, 15. When our senses are impaired, we have reasons to doubt it. , 14. What are two indicators of someone who is truly an expert in, 13. Tom Cruise famously claimed that psychiatry is a harmful pse, 11. What are some ways in which we might regard a non-expert as , 10. Are medical doctors “experts”? Yes and no. Explain. , 8. Here is a principle: If a claim conflicts with expert opinio, 9. What is the fallacy known as “the appeal to authority”?, 7. Why is it legitimate to rely on the information that comes fr, 6. What does it mean to proportion of belief to the evidence?, 5. How does background information constrain the kinds of claims, 4. Here is claim: Some babies can bench-press a five hundred po, 2. What should we do with a claim if it comes in conflict with a, 3. What does the author mean by “background information”?, 1. What does it mean for two claims to conflict? , 18. What is affirming the consequent? Is this type of reasoning, 17. What is denying the antecedent? Is this type of reasoning v, 15. What is denying the consequent or modus tollens? Provide an, 16. What is hypothetical syllogism?, 11. What is a conditional statement? (p. 85), 12. What is the antecedent of a conditional statement?, 13. What is the consequent of a conditional statement?, 14. One pattern of reasoning is called, “affirming the anteceden, 10. What is an implicit premise in an argument?, 9. What are the 4 steps we should take when we are trying to ide, 6. What does it mean for an inductive argument to be strong?, 7. What is it for an inductive argument to be cogent?, 8. What logical conclusion can you draw from the fact that a val, 5. What does it mean for a deductive argument to be valid?, 4. What is the difference between mere persuading and reasoning?, 3. Arguments come in two forms—deductive and inductive. How doe, 1. What is the point of making an argument?, 2. What is the point of evaluating an argument?, 19. How could being a philosophical skeptic get in the way of cr, 18. What could lead someone to become a philosophical skeptic?, 17. What is philosophical skepticism? , 16. What are some arguments against social relativism?, 15. What is social relativism?, 14. What are two arguments the author gives for thinking that su, 13. How might accepting subjective relativism get in the way of , 12. What is subjective relativism? , 10. What is group pressure thinking? , 11. How is group pressure thinking an impediment to critical thi, 9. What is wrong with selectively paying attention to the eviden, 7. Tommy Morrison, former boxer, was diagnosed with HIV but late, 6. What exactly is wrong with self-interested thinking?, 5. How can the need to save face have on effect on the way we th, 4. What are some factors that might lead us to self-interested t, 3. What is self-interested thinking? How can self-interested th, 1. The most common impediments to critical thinking can be sorte, 2. What does the author mean by hindrances to critical thinking , 7. What is an argument?, 8. List some common premise indicators, 9. List some common conclusion indicators, 5. What is a statement? (p. 9), 6. What are reasons?, 3. What is the sense in which critical thinking is broader than , 4. What is the sense in which being a critical thinker allows on, 2. What does it mean to say that critical thinking operates acco, 1. Define “critical thinking”, 12. What is it for an inductive argument to be strong?, 13. What is it for an inductive inference to be strong?, 10. What is it for a set of statements to be consistent?, 11. What is it for a set of statements to be inconsistent?, 8. What is a sound deductive argument?, 9. Can a sound deductive argument ever have a false conclusion? , 7. Can a valid deductive argument have all false premises yet a , 6. Can a valid deductive argument ever have a false conclusion? , 5. What is a valid deductive argument?, 4. What is the key difference between an inductive argument and , 3. What is an inductive argument?, 2. What is a deductive argument?, 1. What is an argument? , 25. What is the faulty analogy fallacy?, 1. What is rhetoric? , 2. How is rhetoric different from argumentation?, 3. What is an innuendo?, 4. What is a euphemism? Provide examples., 5. What is a dysphemism? Provide examples. , 6. What is a stereotype? , 7. What is ridicule? How can ridicule be used as a substitute f, 8. What is a rhetorical definition?, 9. What is a lexical definition?, 10. What is a stipulative definition?, 11. What is a précising definition?, 1. What is a statement? , 2. What is statement or propositional logic?, 3. What are the 4 logical connectives in our propositional logic, 4. What is a simple statement?, 5. What is a compound statement?, 6. What is a conjunction statement?, 7. Create a truth table and define conjunction & truth-functiona, 8. Create a truth table and define disjunction v truth functiona, 9. Create a truth table and define negation ~ truth functionally, 10. Create a truth table and define the conditional -> truth fun
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Vocabulary Test: The Lightning Thief Chapter 17&18Words:hurtling, critical, nuzzling, realm, fugitive, resisted, excess, inconsiderate, nudge, transparent, podium, agitated, disembark, frisking, rifling, dissipated, muffled
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Vocabulary Test: ChibiWords:brooded, commotion, dori, proceeded, scraggly, kerchief, vendor, moat, clambered, honk
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Vocabulary Test: ChibiWords:brooded, commotion, dori, proceeded, scraggly, kerchief, vendor, moat, clambered, honk
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Vocabulary Test: The Lightning Thief Chapter 16Words:sarcastic, defenseless, metamorphosis, pathetic, destination, decency, mournful, befriended, advice, deception, torment, replica, relieved, sympathetic, jarred
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Vocabulary Test: The Lightning Thief Chapter 5Words:confined, hovered, recoiled, mischievous, glint, intimidating, analyzing, pudgy, flinched, sufficiaet, timidly, incinerates
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Vocabulary Test: CS Lewis VocabWords:aesthetic, alacrity, conciliate, congruity, delusion, discordant, effussive, ephemeral, inimitable, jocund, malaise, nettle, nominal, parochial, posterity, precarious, prodigious, recalcitrant, remorse, sanguine, superfluous, ubiquitous, veridical, voracious, admonish
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Vocabulary Test: Hunger GamesWords:Entrails, Assets, Totalitarian, Saturate, Infatuate, Post Apocolyptic, Apothecary, Reap, Supple, Contemporary, Catacomb, Imprudent, Anxious, Dystopian, Ruminate, Abate, Iodine, Heroine, Protagonist, Trilogy
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Vocabulary Test: A Conference on ShakespeareWords:bravado, feign, allay, fortuitous, adroit, despot, mesmerize, farcical, choleric, omniscient, hyperbole, incognito, expatriate, ennui, cognizant, assimilated, blazon, discursive, colloquy, dirge
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Vocabulary Test: QuizWords:Muster, Spluttering, Tartan, Shoah, Genocide, Prejudice, Peckish, Restrictions, Inscription, Fable
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Vocabulary Test: Vocabulary WorkshopWords:facet, acute, bluster, bungle, commentary, duration, eerie, fidelity , fray, headstrong, inhabitant, numb, pacify, ranvenous, refute, remorse, setback, smug, synopsis, tarry
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Vocabulary Test: vocab unit 2Words:adjourn, alien, comely, compensate, dissolute, erratic, expulsion, feint, fodder, fortify, illegible, jeer, lucrative, mediocre, proliferate, subjugate, sully, tantalize, terse, unflinching
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Vocabulary Test: latin vocab31-32Words:metus, versus, adsum, fero, impono, insto, ostendo, praesto, promitto, prosum, adfero, aufero, confero, infero, refero, tollo
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Vocabulary Test: nortriederWords:pathos, discordant, arid, levity, surreptitious, esoteric, serendipity, innate, eccentric, impugn, scoff, disparage, maverick, novel, profundity, sage , clandestine, euphoric, equanimity, mar, deleterious, eradicate, demonstrative, sully, debacle
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Vocabulary Test: Poetry Vocab QuizWords:Imagery, Personification, Rhyme, Rhyme Scheme, Internal Rhyme, Approximate Rhyme, Alliteration, Consonance, Assonance, Onomatopoiea, Hyperbole, Idiom, Pun, Allusion, Mood, Tone, Perspective, Refrain, Repetition, Apostrophe, Simile, Metaphor, Verse, Stanza, Foot, Meter
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Vocabulary Test: Julius Caesar VocabularyWords:battlement, mechanical, vulgar, barren, cogitation, countenance, throng, conceit, construe, ordinance, betwixt, extremities, faction, wary, imminent, prevail, thrice, valiant, contrive, fray, constant, enterprise, petition, redress, censure, entreat, extenuate, grievous, legacy, testament, prick, provender, levy, instance, mettle, chastisement, fret, slight, testy, vex, ensign, gallant, engender, misconstrue, spoil
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Vocabulary Test: norriederWords:co/com/con, cred, ambi, bell, cis, equi, dict, ex, dur, ben, circum , ami, cogn, arch, de, dis, auto, chrono
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Vocabulary Test: ScienceWords:balanced forces, unbalanced forces, action, reaction, work, simple machine, lever, fulcrum, effort arm, resistance arm
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Vocabulary Test: Unit2Words:Hapless, Dissemble, Somber, Propound, Mundane, Proactive, Occlude, Sullen, Obdurate, Utopia, Serene , Fester, Indelible, Durress , Innvendo, Interim, Divulge, Malleable, Melapropism, Imbroglio
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Vocabulary Test: Unit3Words:Evince, Lucid, Exhume, Immolate, dISTEND, Forestall, Inert, Flux, Fulsome, Extrinsic, Infringe, Hiatus, Emanate, Inure, Ennui, Kindle , Interlude, Laconic, Chronic , Allege
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Vocabulary Test: Unit 4Words:Apposite, Dilatory, Cohort, Apathy, Indolent, Fatvous, Infest , Fecund, Elocution, Hubris, Irascible, Heinous, Latent, Entity , Grovel, Minion, Extort , maleviolent , Oblique, Solemn
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Vocabulary Test: Unit5Words:Sunder, Surmise, Palpable, Qualm, Stuper, Obscure, Turbid, Pathos, Tenvors, Penury, Obtrusive, Procure, Static , Boistereous, Transpire, Viable, Ulterior, Sacrilege, Pliable, Nexus
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Vocabulary Test: Vocabulary #11Words:eulogy, euphonious, euphemism, euphoria, euthanasia, euGenics, euTHenics, eunuch, apportion, proportionate, disproportionately, loquacious, eloquent, soliloquy, computation, dispute, disputable, repute, accord, discord
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