Who was credited with the earliest forms of public speaking?
the ancient greeks
What is the first "Canons of Kemet?"
silence
What is Ad Hominem?
This fallacy occurs when an author attacks his opponent instead of his opponent’s argument
what speech is committed to memory?
memorized speeches
Pathos
Using emotions and passion to persuade
Who developed the five canons of rhetoric?
cicero
what is the second "Canon of Kemet?"
good-timing
What is Bandwagon Fallacy?
Appeal to the masses
what speech is made with little to no preparation?
Logos
Using logical reasoning and evidence to persuade
What is the 2nd "5 Canons of Rhetoric?"
Arrangement
what is the fourth "Canon of Kemet?"
fluency
What is False Dilemma?
Fallacy relies on the assumption that only two possible solutions exist, so that disproving one solution means the other solution appears to be the only logical conclusion
What speech is carefully prepared yet adjusted to the present situation to seem conversational?
Extemporaneous
Ethos
Using character, credibility, and ethics to persuade
What is the last "Canon of Rhetoric?"
Memory
what is the third "canon of kemet?"
restraint
What is Hasty Generalization?
When the proponent uses insufficient evidence to support a sweeping generalization
What speech would be a valedictorian’s speech at a college commencement?
Manuscript
What is the difference between argumentative and persuasive?
Persuasive is trying to persuade whereas argumentative maintains a tone of fairness and reasonableness
What are the 5 Canons of Rhetoric in their correct order?
invention, arrangement, style, delivery, memory
What are the 5 Canons of Kemet in their correct order?
silence, good-timing, restraint, fluency, truthfulness
Give an example of a false dilemma
If we don't order pizza for dinner, we'll have to eat the week-old spaghetti in the fridge.
memorized, impromptu, manuscript, extemporaneous
What is the CRAAP Test?
Currency, relevance, authority, accuracy, purpose