english 3rd quarter

    Cards (53)

    • This happens when people are too relied on current information or
      the initial information they find in decision-making.
      anchoring bias
    • a tendency to look at things in a certain way, in preference to another way.
      bias
    • are closely related and often used interchangeably. Both have a negative impact on our dealings
      bias and prejudice
    • This happens when the journalists and news producers in the mass media select what to report and cover.
      media bias
    • This happens when one tends to search for, interpret, favor and remember information supporting one's belief and views.
      confirmation
    • This happens when one makes a wrong or uncomfortable decision to fit in to please the group of people.
      conformity
    • This happens when one sees the wonderful thing about a person and let the perceptions on everything else about that person be distorted.
      halo effect
    • refers to pre-judging before looking at the evidence.
      prejudice
    • This is the idea that groups of people exhibit different personality characteristics and can be separated based on the dominance of one race over another.
      racism
    • This is a prejudice based on sex or gender.
      sexism
    • This is a prejudice based on social class or grouping of individuals based on wealth, occupation, income, education, and social network.
      classism
    • This is a prejudicial attitude towards older people, old age, and the aging process.
      ageism
    • This is the attitude towards a person or group differently because of the particular beliefs about religion. 

      religion
    • is a form of drama that is written in one act, as opposed to plays that are divided into several acts. It usually has a running time of between 15 minutes to an hour, and focuses on a single event or problem, taking place in a single setting.
      one act play
    • It is an often-humorous way of poking fun at the powers that be. Sometimes, it is created with the goal to drive social change. Satire has a long history and it is as relevant today as it was in ancient Rome.
      satire
    • is comic and offers light social commentary. It is meant to poke fun at a person or situation in an entertaining way.
      horatian
    • is dark, rather than comedic. It is meant to speak truth to power.
      juvenalian
    • casts moral judgment on a particular belief, such as homophobia or racism.
      Menippean
    • a narrative genre in literature that involves a mysterious, adventurous, or spiritual story line where the focus is on a quest that involves bravery and strong values, not always a love interest.
      romance
    • is any work that is intended to incite laughter and amusement, especially in theatre, television, film, stand-up comedy or any other entertainment medium.
      comedy
    • in literature is defined as a genre that focuses around a noble character who struggles against strong external challenges.
      tragedy
    • is a dramatic genre that came to be in the 1800s in an atmosphere of political and social turmoil.
      realism
    • a genre of speculative fiction involving magical elements, typically set in a fictional universe and usually inspired by mythology or folklore.
      fantasy play
    • is the place, together with other conditions, such as time and the environment, involved in which the events occur.
      setting
    • are the people, or sometimes animals, subjected in the drama and are portrayed by the actors and actresses in the play.
      characters
    • The question of style in a play is confined to blank. The blank should be spoken and heard with ease.
      dialogue
    • referring to the play's basic storyline, is the structure of a play that tells what happens as the story goes.
      plot
    • Most plays have a blank or main ideas, such as the value of prayer, the rewards of showing patience, or the healing power of love.
      theme
    • is the type of play.
      genre
    • is a group of people who watch the play.
      audience
    • platform on the actors perform.
      stage
    • An oral reading activity that closely resembles radio drama employing the use of vocal and physical suggestions to set the mood of the situation.
      readers theatre
    • The main character of the play is known as the
      protagonist
    • opposes the protagonist or enemy
      antagonist
    • supporting or secondary characters
      side characters
    • used to modify verb, adjective and other adverbs
      adverb
    • how things are done or happen
      adverb of manner
    • when the things are done
      adverb of time
    • where the things are done
      adverb of place
    • how often things are done
      adverb of frequency
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