I can show you the world Shining, shimmering splendid. This Disney Aladdin song uses this repetition of sounds at the beginning of adjacent words.
What is alliteration?
This type of tone is used when you are charging someone of wrongdoing. It's the blame none of us want to be the victim of.
What is accusatory?
The author's use of words.
What is diction?
Person
Who is Betty?
Using facts, statistics, and reasoning is an appeal to this.
What is logos or logic?
And ain't I a woman?" Sojourner Truth uses this rhetorical device to appeal to the sympathetic emotion of her audience.
What is rhetorical question?
The Crucible is an example of this--a story that hints at some larger political meaning.
What is an allegory?
Person
Who is Anne Bradstreet?
A commercial about donating money to hungry and homeless children, a pamphlet with facts of the negative effects drinking alcohol, and an ad endorsed by President Obama are RESPECTIVELY using these three appeals.
What is pathos, logos, and ethos?
When the audience knows something that a character in the text does not.
What is dramatic irony?
Place
What is the forest/woods?
When two words, phrases, images, ideas are placed close together or side by side for comparison or contrast.
What is juxtaposition?
A character who never changes throughout a text.
What is a static character?
Food
What is soup?
The lines "It's in the reach of my arms, The span of my hips, The stride of my step, The curl of my lip" is written in this type of structure.
What is parallel?
"I got my mind on my money and my money on my mind." These are no Kris Kross lyrics, but it is an example of a rhetorical device which comes from the Greek word meaning Criss Cross. It is parallel in syntax but the words are reversed.
What is chiasmus?
The use of humor, irony, exaggeration, or ridicule to expose and criticize people's stupidity or vices, particularly in the context of contemporary politics and other topical issues.
What is satire?
Situation
What is the court scene where the girls are pretending that Mary Warren sent her spirit out to get them?
This is one of the few rhetorical devices that begin with "L." It describes a statement that is affirmed by negating its opposite. For example: "He's no fool." Meaning he's really smart. (You have until your time runs out to look it up)
What is litotes?