Names
Chapter 6 Vocab
Chapter 9 Vocab
Start's with a "C"
Chapter 12 Vocal
100
What is Shanell's last name?
Smith
100
A strategy for generating topic ideas in which a potential speaker lists every idea that comes to mind - without evaluating
Brainstorming
100
key ideas that support a thesis and help and audience understand and remember what is most important about the speaker's topic; main points are supported by subpoints
Main Points
100
A feature of a well-organized speech in which certain points share the same level of significance. For example, each main point is coordinate with the other main points, each subpoena with the other subpoints, and each sub point wit the other sub points, and each sub-subpoint with the other sub-subpoint.
Coordination
100
This requires consideration of audience, occasion, and nature of one's message when choosing language for a speech.
Word Choice (Dictation)
200
Who is from Philadelphia?
Tori
200
A single sentence that conveys the topic and purpose of a speech. all the different parts of a speech, such as the main points and subpoints, should tie into the thesis statement. sometimes also called the topic statement or central idea
Thesis Statement
200
The section of a speech that falls between the introduction and the conclusion and contains the main part of the speech. That includes all the main points and the material that supports them
body
200
A speech organization pattern that explains cause-and-effect relationships in which each main point is either ah event that leads to a situation or a link in a chain of events between a catalyst and a final outcome
Casual Pattern
200
This meaning of a word is its exact, literal dictionary definition.
Denotative Meaning
300
Who's last name is Stinnett?
John Henry
300
The occasion, surrounding environment, and situation in which a speaker gives a presentation
Context
300
Examples, definitions, testimony, statistics, narratives, and analogies that support or illustrate a speaker's main points
Supporting points
300
Something that leaves a lasting impression of a speech in a listeners' minds, usually used as the second element in a speech conclusion. To go out with a bang, a speaker can extend a story or an anecdote he or she used at the start of the speech, relay a new story or anecdote, end with a striking phrase or sentence, or conclude with an emotional message.
Clincher
300
Specialized or technical words or phrases familiar only to people in a specific field or group.
Jargon
400
Which two people are from New York?
Jaisha and Naseem
400
a strategy for genereating topic ideas in which a person writes down an initial word or phrase and then surrounds it with additional words, pictures, and symbols to create an interconnected map of ideas
Mind mapping
400
A speech organization pattern in which the main points represent important aspects of a topic, thought of as adjacent to one another in location or geography. If a speaker were discussing historical sites in a state's three largest cities, he/she might use a spatial pattern of organization
Spatial Pattern
400
This meaning of a word is an association that comes to mind when people hear or read the word.
Connotative Meaning
400
Unnecessary words in a presentation; extraneous words that make it hard for the audience to follow your message.
Verbal Clutter
500
Who's last name is Gilmore?
Tee
500
A rhetorical purpose that seeks to strengthen isteners' commitment, weaken listeners' commitment, or promote a particular action
Persuasive Purpose
500
a short list of ideas before a main point or sub point that quickly summarizes the points that will follow. Using an internal preview is akin to giving the audience an advance warning of what is to come
Internal Preview
500
This type of word is specific and suggests exactly what you mean.
Concrete word
500
Clauses set in opposition to one another.
Antithesis
M
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