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THIS. IS. Jeopardy. Your. With. Host. Mr. Gonzalez. Jeopardy. Quotes / Commas, etc. Claim Evidence Warrant. Quoting and Citing. Verb agreement/idioms. Pronouns and verbs. More Quoting. 100. 100. 100. 100. 100. 100. 200. 200. 200. 200. 200. 200. 300. 300. 300. 300.
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THIS IS Jeopardy
Your With Host... Mr. Gonzalez
Jeopardy Quotes/ Commas, etc. Claim Evidence Warrant Quoting and Citing Verb agreement/idioms Pronouns and verbs More Quoting 100 100 100 100 100 100 200 200 200 200 200 200 300 300 300 300 300 300 400 400 400 400 400 400 500 500 500 500 500 500
What is a “claim?” A 100
The thesis, driving concern, or question in an academic paper. Remember, the claim can be complex and can take the entire essay to elucidate. That is often the purpose of an essay, to elucidate rather than prove. A 100
What do you call the ideas you present in support of your claim? A 200
Evidence A 200
What is a “warrant?” A 300
a warrant is technically “authorization.” In this case, the warrant is your explanation for how the evidence you have provided supports or elaborates upon your thesis/claim. A 300
True or false. Writing an academic paper is more about using the proper form than your ideas. A 500
False. There are many successful formats. Ideas are crucial to an essay’s success. A 500
Quoting is when… B 100
You put quotes around the exact words and include a parenthetical citation at the end. B 200
What is paraphrasing? B 300
When you use another person’s ideas in your paper, but rephrase them in your own words. You give credit to the author of the ideas by properly citing them. B 300
Rephrasing someone else’s ideas in your own words and using a parenthetical citation. A page # is not necessarily required. B 400
When what you are recalling is so moving, powerful, shocking, beautifully worded or well stated that changing it into your own words would cause it to lose its dramatic effect. B 500
When do you paraphrase? C 100
Basically, any time you want to use information that is not yours and it isn’t worthy of quoting. C 100
Which is the more common error in writing: Not using enough quotes, or overusing quotes when paraphrasing would work fine. C 200
Overusing quotes C 200
Is this sentence properly cited? “I went to school in my mother’s car” (Smith 11).” C 300
No. You don’t need quotes after the parenthetical citation. “I went to school in my mother’s car” (Smith 11).” C 300
DAILY DOUBLE DAILY DOUBLE Place A Wager C 400
Is this sentence properly cited? “What they carried varied by rank.” (O’Brien). C 400
No. You don’t need punctuation inside the quotes. “What they carried varied by rank.” (O’Brien). C 400
Put quotation marks where needed: He told me, the surgeon put it this way, I can fix it. C 500
He told me, “The surgeon put it this way, ‘I can fix it.’” C 500
Which is correct. Who is supposed to take out the garbage? Whom is supposed to take out the garbage? D 100
Which of the following is a singular pronoun? I Everybody Anyone. She D 200
All of them are. All indefinite pronouns are singular. D 200
Is this sentence correct? Everyone went home to get their raincoats. D 300
No. Everyone is indefinite and therefore singular. Everyone went home to get his/her raincoat. D 300
What is wrong with this sentence? Lisa and Jen wanted to take her car. D 400
Is the following a linking verb or an action verb? Hear the roar of the jet engines. D 500
Action D 500
Linking or action. The passengers were waiting for take off. E 100
Linking. E 100
Is this a correct sentence? Just as Pam was putting her book bag away, a dog runs past her. E 200
No. There is a verb “tense shift” Just as Pam was putting her book bag away, a dog runs past her. E 200
Do question marks go inside our outside of quotations? E 300