Appeals
Rhetorical Devices
Rhetorical Strategies
Argument
Texts
100

The appeal to logic and reasoning in an argument.

Logos

100

A rhetorical question is most often used to achieve this effect.

prompts the audience to consider an idea without expecting an actual answer

100

This rhetorical strategy places contrasting ideas close together to highlight differences.

Juxtaposition

100

This type of evidence relies on personal experience or observation rather than research.

Anecdotal

100

By presenting opposite perspectives in “Food is Good” and “Food is Bad,” Bourdain mainly emphasizes this larger idea

complexity or contradiction of food culture

200

The appeal to ethics and credibility.

Ethos

200

This device uses deliberate repetition at the end of successive clauses.

Epistrophe

200

An author’s shift from formal diction to conversational language most directly affects this element of the text.

Tone

200

An effective AP Lang argument essay balances strong claims with this rhetorical practice to avoid oversimplification.

Counterargument

200

The Other Wes Moore compares two men with the same name primarily to explore this theme.

the impact of choices and environment

300

The appeal that targets the audience's emotions.

Pathos

300

A writer arranging details from least important to most important is using this structural device.

Climax or amplification

300

In rhetorical analysis, explaining why a strategy is effective for the audience is known as this.

Commentary

300

This rhetorical move strengthens an argument by acknowledging limitations or alternative perspectives.

Qualification

300

Tara Westover grows up isolated from mainstream society primarily because of her father’s this.

Extremist beliefs, mistrust 

400

A speech that repeatedly references national history and shared sacrifice is primarily developing this rhetorical appeal.

Ethos

400

“Some rise by sin, and some by virtue fall.”

Antithesis

400

When a writer qualifies a claim by acknowledging limitations or exceptions, they are demonstrating this sophistication skill.

Nuance

400

In AP Lang argument essays, evidence alone does not earn high scores unless the writer consistently explains this.

Line of reasoning

400

Douglass primarily argues that literacy leads to this. 

Freedom

500

A writer opens an essay with a nostalgic childhood memory before transitioning into statistics and policy discussion. This shift most likely serves what rhetorical purpose?

establishing emotional connection and credibility before introducing a logical argument

500

“I came, I saw, I conquered.”

Asyndeton

500

By repeatedly using short, fragmented sentences after a long descriptive passage, an author most likely creates what rhetorical effect?

Emphasis on urgency, tension, or emotional intensity through contrast in syntax

500

In AP Lang, the acronym CHORES helps students remember effective types of evidence: current events, history, outside knowledge, reading, experiences, and this final category.

Science, Stats

500

Mike Rose's essay critiques educational systems that do this to students. 

limit expectations or label students unfairly

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