FIgurative language that uses “Like” or “As”
Simile
-Rhetoric is
the art of effective or persuasive speaking or writing
A question around which you center your research.-
Research question
The topic or opinion of the topic
claim
Sentences that are too short and often repeat the same words.
Choppy Sentences
Figurative language that compares to dissimilar things without “Like” or “As”
Metaphor
Rhetoric that references studies, statistics, and case studies.
Logos
Credible by its relevance, Currency, Accuracy, Purpose
Credible source
The assumption or chain of reasoning that connects the grounds to the claim
warrant
A sentence that is missing either its subject or its main verb.
Sentence fragments
A figure of speech that shows extreme exaggeration
Hyperbole
The credibility or trust of a person.
Ethos
Taking someone else’s work or ideas and passing them off as your own
Plagiarism
The reasons that support the claim in the form of a ‘because’ sentence.
grounds/evidence
occurs when independent clauses are not joined properly.
Run-on sentences
When a director deliberately makes a situation seem less important
Understatement
The difference between ethos, logos, and pathos is…
Ethos is credibility, Pathos is emotions/values, and Logos is logic and reason.
Integrity is adhering to the conventions of academic academy
Academic integrity
Counterarguments to the claim, followed by reasons that those counterarguments are false and do not support the claim.
rebuttal
a sentence that connects two independent clauses, typically with a coordinating conjunction like and or but.
Compound sentences
The repetition of the same word or phrase at the beginning of several clauses
Anaphora
-Draw the rhetoric triangle on the white board
Audience, Purpose, Context
Property is the expression of ideas you find in works produced by others that you then use to advance and support your own claims.
Intellectual property
specification of limits to claim, warrant, and argument
qualification
a sentence with one independent clause and at least one dependent clause.
Complex sentence