| A | B |
| Arranged in the order of the book | table of contents |
| Arranged in alphabetical order at the back of the book | index |
| A research source for over two million newspaper articles | Newsbank |
| A research source for over magazines | Ebsco Host Mas Ultra |
| Reference source to use to locate famous quotations | bartleby.com |
| Writes material for someone else to publish | ghost writer |
| Taking credit for someone elseÕs work | plagiarism |
| Classifies a book by its general category of information | subject card |
| Involves studying the group you will speak to so you can adapt your information to them | audience analysis |
| Tells you exactly where books are located in the library | card catalog |
| Best online sources | databases |
| Cooperative system allowing one library to borrow and check out books from another library | interlibrary loan |
| Has its own index for locating articles | New York Times |
| Won't protect you from plagiarism | paraphrasing |
| Where you cite speech sources | in the speech |
| Sources you donÕt have to cite | common knowledge |
| Choose the answer that puts the parts of an introduction in the correct order | Òattention getter |
| Appropriate attention getters | Òstory |
| Part of a speech states the topic and provides the theory for your speech | thesis |
| The hook that gets people interested in what you are going to say | attention getter |
| The bridge from your opening statements to your thesis | link |
| Tells your audience what you are going to say | preview |
| The heart or brains of your speech | body |
| How many main points are in a speech | three |
| The first part of your conclusion | restatement of the thesis |
| The second part of the conclusion | review of main points or summary |
| The final part of the speech that ties back to the opening | clincher |
| Another name for a speech map | outline |
| Type of speech organization organizes by geography or space sequence | spatial |
| Type of speech organization organizes by moving in order of importance | climactic |
| Type of speech organization organizes information in date sequence | chronological pattern |
| What are the three main divisions of a speech | Òattention getter |
| This technique refers to the repetition of vowel sounds in a series of words | assonance |
| This technique refers to the repetition of consonants sounds in a series of words | consonance |
| This technique refers to the repetition of sounds at the beginning of words | alliteration |
| Types of comparison imagery | Òmetaphor |
| Types of contrast imagery | Òantithesis |
| Types of exaggeration imagery | Òhyperbole |
| Comparison using the words like or as | simile |
| Comparison that does NOT use the words ÒlikeÓ or ÒasÓ | metaphor |
| This technique gives human characteristics to nonhuman things | personification |
| This technique use exaggeration or overstatement for emphasis in a speech | hyperbole |
| Refers to words or a phrase that seem to be contradictory | irony |
| When a speaker uses the same phrase or rhythm over and over for effect | it is called; parallelism |
| The precise dictionary definition of a word | denotation |
| The meaning that has come to be associated with the word | connotation |
| Non-standard words may be used by people within the same group or job | jargon |
| When an experienced speaker waits give out handouts | at the end of the speech |
| What type of speech is totally unprepared and spontaneous | impromptu |