Rhetoric Appeals
Structure
Structure cont./Style
Style
Argument
100

Appeals to an audience's emotions.

Pathos

100

Sets the stage by outlining context and information that is key to understanding. 

Background information

100

System that organizes evidence and its corresponding outcome

Cause and effect

100

The author's, narrator's, or speaker's attitude toward the subject; shaped by diction, syntax, imagery, and details. 

Tone

100

Progression of claims, evidence, and commentary that supports an argument or thesis. 

Line of reasoning. 

200

Appeals to logic, reason, and intellect. 

Logos

200

Analyzing two or more texts, characters, or themes to find similarities and differences. 

Compare and contrast

200

Argument that opposes or challenges an author's main thesis

Counterclaim

200
Deviations from ordinary arrangement of words, focusing on structure, repetition, and balance to enhance effect. (Parallelism, repetition, anaphora, omission, etc) 

Syntactical Schemes 

200

Logical fallacy where an opponent's character, motive, or personal attributes are attacked instead of addressing the actual issue of an argument. 

Ad hominem

300

Appeals to credibility, character, and authority.

Ethos

300

Method or voice used to convey a story, acting as a bridge between events and the audience.

Narration

300

Summarizes key findings, synthesizes existing knowledge, reinforces significance. 

Conclusion

300

Recurring conventions, plot devices, or figurative language techniques used to enhance stories by setting a reader's expectations and enforcing narrative familiarity. 

Literary Tropes

300

Consistent grammatical structure, rhythm, or sound to balance paired words, phrases, or clauses to create a memorable, rhythmic, and cohesive pattern. 

Parallelism

400

Combination of ideas to form theory or idea.

Synthesis. 

400

Listing details, items, or ideas in sequence to enhance description, create a rhythm, or emphasize a point. 

Enumeration

400

Vivid, descriptive language that appeals to human senses

Imagery

400

Uses humor, irony, exaggeration, or ridicule to expose and critisize human vices, follies, abuses, or shortcomings. 

Satire

400

Sentence with a subject and a verb, acting as an independent sentence & a sentence lacking a subject and verb, acting as a part of speech. 

Clauses and phrases. 

500

Perception of character displayed.

Persona

500

Vivid language and sensory details to paint a picture in reader's mind of a person, place, object, or scene.

Description

500

Intentional selection of words to convey meaning and tone to shape the reader's emotional response. 

Word choice/ Diction

500

Artistic, deliberate use of words, syntax, and style by an author to create meaning, evoke emotion, and construct a unique voice. 

Language

500

Grammatical error where a verbal phrase unintentionally modifies the wrong noun - or no noun at all - because the intended subject is missing or misplaced. 

Dangling participle 

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