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In this article I'll provide two lists: one of essential key AP Language and Composition terms to know for the exam, and one list of useful bonus words that will serve you well on the exam. Then I'll advise how to learn and use these terms for AP success!
Download free-response questions from past AP English Language & Composition exams, along with scoring guidelines, sample responses, and scoring distributions.
AP English Language and Composition is an introductory college-level composition course. Students cultivate their understanding of writing and rhetorical arguments through reading, analyzing, and writing texts as they explore topics like rhetorical situation, claims and evidence, reasoning and organization, and style.
1.A Identify and describe components of the rhetorical situation: the exigence, audience, writer, purpose, context, and message. 3.A Identify and explain claims and evidence within an argument. 4.A Develop a paragraph that includes a claim and evidence supporting the claim.
Review Unit 1 Overview for your test on Unit 1 – Claims, Reasoning, and Evidence. For students taking AP English Language.
In AP English Language and Composition, you’ll read nonfiction texts through the eyes of a writer, exploring the choices writers and speakers make to persuade their audience. By analyzing how writing is composed, you’ll be able to construct your own persuasive pieces.
On the AP English exam, you will be asked to identify the tone/attitude of the speaker and write about how the tone/attitude is conveyed to the reader. Here are some examples of different tones/human attitudes: burlesque- mocking through caricature or comic exaggeration. colloquial- using a conversational style.