Rhetorical Situation
Rhetorical Appeals
Types of Evidence
Effects of Evidence
Methods of Development
100

This element of the rhetorical situation refers to the person or group the text is intended to reach.

What is the audience?

100

This rhetorical appeal relies on logic, reasoning, and facts.

What is logos?

100

Known facts, statistics, or measurable data are examples of this type of evidence.

What is quantitative evidence?

100

This effect of evidence helps the audience better understand a claim by giving concrete, specific instances.

What is providing examples?

100

This method supports a claim by providing specific instances of it being true or correct.

What is exemplification?

200

In rhetorical analysis, we need to consider the background, credibility, and motivations of this person.

Who is the speaker?

200

This appeal seeks to influence the audience through emotion, either relying on existing emotions/biases or inspiring them.

What is pathos?

200

This type of evidence focuses on descriptions, observations, or personal experiences rather than numerical data.

What is qualitative evidence?

200

When evidence makes an abstract or complex claim easier to visualize or imagine, it is doing this.

What is illustrating a claim?

200

This method explains why something happens and/or what results from it.

What is cause/effect?

300

This term refers to the historical, cultural, or social circumstances surrounding a text.

What is the context?

300

This appeal is built through the speaker's credibility, character, and/or authority.

What is ethos?

300

A personal story used to support a claim is known as an...

What is an anecdote?

300

This effect of evidence often overlaps with pathos and is used intentionally to shape how the audience feels about the topic before they logically evaluate the claim.

What is setting a mood?

300

This method of development explains a topic and/or claim by detailing similarities and differences.

What is compare/contrast?

400

This part of the rhetorical situation explains why the speaker is writing or speaking in the first place, namely what they want the audience to achieve.

What is the purpose?

400

An argument that draws a general claim about pushing back school start times needing after citing multiple studies and examples relies on this type of reasoning.

What is inductive reasoning?

400

Evidence/statements that come from experts, authorities, or other credible stories are known as...

What is testimonies?

400

This effect occurs when evidence reinforces the importance or seriousness of a claim by adding weight, intensity, or a sense of range or scope.

What is emphasizing or amplifying a claim?

400

This method of development leads the audience through a story, wherein the claim is developed over the course of the events of the story.

What is narration?

500

This term refers to the immediate and recent circumstances that prompted a speaker to create their argument, or the circumstances that gave them the opportunity to be heard.

What is the exigence?

500

An argument that applies a universal rule, such as “all citizens deserve equal rights,” to a single policy debate relies on this type of reasoning.

What is deductive reasoning?

500

This type of evidence supports a claim by explaining an unfamiliar idea through its similarity to a more familiar concept, though it can become weak if the comparison is oversimplified or misleading.

What is an analogy?

500

Effective commentary seeks to do one or both of these things:

Explain the effect of the evidence on the argument,

Or, explain the argument's impact on this part of the rhetorical situation.

What is the audience?

500

This method of development clarifies an abstract concept by delineating what it is like, and what does and does not qualify as being an example of that concept.

What is definition/description?

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