This glossary covers widely used terminology across British Parliamentary (BP), Policy, and Lincoln–Douglas (LD) formats. BP-specific items are marked (BP) where helpful.
Sides & Roles
- Proposition / Government (BP): The side in favor of the motion.
- Opposition (BP): The side against the motion.
- Affirmative (Policy/LD): Argues for the resolution.
- Negative (Policy/LD): Argues against the resolution.
- Wing (Judge): Panel judge who assists the chair in adjudication.
- Tabmaster: Person responsible for the tournament’s tab (results & draws).
- Convenor: Tournament organizer.
Rounds, Pairings & Progression
- Preliminary Round (Prelim): Rounds all teams debate before eliminations.
- Outround / Elimination Round: Knockout rounds after the break (e.g., Octos, Quarters, Semis, Final).
- Break: Advancing from prelims to outrounds (as a speaker or judge).
- Break Room (BP): Any room in the last prelim from which teams could still break.
- Open Round: A round where results are announced to teams after the debate.
- Closed Round: A round where results are not announced in-room.
- Power Pair (BP): Pairing teams with similar team points against each other.
- Pull Up (BP): Being placed in a higher-ranked room than your current points would ordinarily place you.
- Bin (BP): A low-ranked room.
- Open (tournament): Allows composite (mixed-institution) teams to compete.
- Swing Team: A reserve team used to complete a full room of four teams.
Elims shorthand
- Octo-Finals: Top 16 teams/debaters.
- Quarter-Finals: Top 8.
- Semi-Finals: Top 4.
- Finals: Top 2.
Motions, Models & Theory
- Motion / Resolution: The statement to be debated.
- Open Motion (BP): A broad motion left for Opening Government to interpret.
- Definition (BP): The policy/interpretation provided by Opening Government.
- Counterprop(osal) (BP): Opposition’s alternative model/policy.
- Spirit of the Resolution: Reasonable bounds of how a resolution should be interpreted.
- Topicality: Whether an argument adheres to the resolution (literally or in spirit).
- Status Quo: The current state of affairs.
- Squirrel (BP): An illegitimate/unreasonable narrowing or shifting of the motion by Opening Government.
Timing & In-Round Mechanics
- Protected Time (BP): First and last minute of a speech where POIs cannot be offered.
- Point of Information (POI) (BP): A brief (≤15s) interjection/question by the opposing bench during unprotected time.
- Barrack / Badger: Disruptive rapid-fire offering of POIs (not allowed).
- Cross-Examination (CX): Questioning period (primarily Policy/LD).
- Constructive Speech: First speech by each debater/team—lays out the case.
- Rebuttal: Explaining why the other side’s arguments are wrong.
- Rebuttal Speech: Rebuilds your case, refutes opponents, and often summarizes issues.
- Summation (BP): Concluding speech on each side providing a biased round summary.
- Roll (Panel Roll): When wing judges outvote the chair in adjudication.
Scoring, Results & Tab
- Speaker Points (“Speaks”): Individual scores per speech, usually out of 100.
- Team Points (BP): Room placing scores—3 for 1st, 2 for 2nd, 1 for 3rd, 0 for 4th.
- Straights (BP): Having points equivalent to placing 2nd in every round (a common benchmark).
- Tab: The compiled rankings of teams, speakers, and judges.
- Ballot: The sheet (physical or digital) with rankings, comments, and decisions.
- Judging Paradigms: A judge’s interpretive framework—what they value in a round.
- Lay Judges: Judges unfamiliar with debate theory (average-audience lens).
Tournament Logistics
- Draw: The announcement of motions, team positions, rooms, and judging panel.
- Prep(aration) Time (BP): Typically 15 minutes from draw to start of debate.
- Room: The physical venue for a debate; also used informally to indicate rank (e.g., “top room”).
- Crash: Competitor/judge accommodation provided by the tournament.
- Open Motion / Closed Motion: Whether the motion invites interpretation vs. is tightly defined.
Casebuilding & Argumentation (Policy/LD-leaning terms)
- Value: An ideal/standard used to make a moral judgment (LD).
- Criterion: The test/rule for evaluating the value or policy (e.g., legitimacy, efficiency, necessity).
- Contention: A structured claim supporting or opposing the resolution.
- Analysis: The logical reasoning that links claims to impacts.
- Refutation: Directly attacking the opposing arguments.
- Voting Issues: The key reasons a judge should decide for your side.
Tools & Procedures
- Flowing / Flowsheet: Systematic note-taking that tracks arguments and responses.
- Timer: Hand-timer for speeches (not a phone, at many tournaments).
- Time Signals: Hand signals indicating remaining time (varies by tournament).
Common Logical Fallacies (quick reference)
- Ad Hominem: Attacking the person instead of their argument.
- Ad Populum: Claiming something is true because many people believe it.
- Straw Man: Misrepresenting an opponent’s argument to make it easier to attack.
Notes on POIs (BP quick recap)
- When allowed: Middle minutes only (not in protected time).
- Length: Up to ~15 seconds; the speaker may cut off earlier.
- Etiquette: Offer respectfully; after a rejection, wait before offering again.
- Purpose: Sharp challenges that test logic, mechanisms, or impacts—keep them concise.
Novice & Divisions
- Novice: First-year competitor (or a division limited to first-years).
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