Reason me this.
Listen up!
Due Influence
Parts of Speech
Ms. Ellaineous
100

Speakers sometimes use this type of made-up example to get their point across.

Hypothetical.

100

People spend more time doing THIS than any other communicative activity. You heard it here! 

Listening. 

100

The portion of the audience you MOST want to influence.

Target audience. 

100

When moving from one main point to another, the skilled public speaker employs this tool.

Transition

100

A daughter honoring her father's promotion at work would be this type of speech. 

Commemorative (or Tribute).
200

Another word for an error in reasoning.

A fallacy. 

200

Given the credentials of the source, you're more likely to listen to this type of testimony than, say, "peer testimony."

Expert.

200

The main purpose of public speaking is to create this in our listeners. Can you spare some? 

Change. 

200

Not surprisingly, a speech that is divided into smaller topics follows this organizational pattern.

Topical. 

200

(Blank) is the branch of philosophy that deals with issues of right and wrong. 

Ethics. 

300

When someone tries to get you to agree by saying everyone is doing it, they want you to hop on this. 

Bandwagon. 
300

Jumping to this can be a real barrier to listening to a speaker's ideas. It kinda ends the conversation.

Conclusions.

300

To help persuade your audience more effectively, the text suggests establishing this. AKA same soil. 

Common Ground.
300

A speech that takes its audience on a walking tour of Ireland, employs this type of organizational pattern.

Spatial. 
300

A series of short phrases written with the same pattern of words, would be called this term. They usually sit side by side.

Parallelism. 

400

These three propositions (or questions) are the basis of most persuasive speeches. 

Value, Policy, Fact.

400
When listening to a speech to decide if one will agree or disagree with the message, one is engaging in this type of 'judgey' listening. 
Critical. 
400

This type of credibility is what the speaker has at the end of their speech. Also, something one might find at an airport.

Terminal.

400

This part of Monroe's Motivated Sequence deals with helping the audience SEE how your idea will work.

Visualization. 

400

According to the text, plagiarism exists in three types: patchwork, incidental, and this all-encompassing one. It happens all over the world. 

Global.
500

For a document to be credible or sound, it must pass the test of sponsorship and this other 'ship.' A certain medieval king comes to mind. 

Authorship

500

Brief statements that help listeners follow your ideas by indicating exactly where you are in the speech. You might see these along the road. 

Signposts.

500

The credibility of a speaker is based on competence and THIS quality. One of the main parts of a good novel.

Character. 

500

The three parts of a successful persuasive argument involve showing the NEED, the PLAN, and this. Otherwise, it probably won't work. 

PRACTICALITY. 

500

When you want to let the audience know what the upcoming subpoints will be, you use this type of transition. Clue: Inside Movie Trailer

Internal Preview. 

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