Style
Judicial
Epideictic
Deliberative
Miscellaneous
100

This Poetic Device has the repetition of initial consonant sounds

Alliteration

100

Name the two types of law

Universal and Particular

100

Epideictic Rhetoric can also be referred to as

Praise or Censure.

100

All deliberative rhetoric is striving for

The Good.

200

This is an inverted phrase like: "You eat to live. You don't live to eat."

Chiasmus

200

There are 7 stated motives for wrongdoers, name 3 

Chance, nature, compulsion, habit, reasoning, anger, appetite. 

200

What does Aristotle think that we should censure.

Vices.

200
Deliberative rhetoric is whose favorite rhetoric?

Aristotle

300

The repetition of words at the beginning of successive phrases.

Anaphora

300

What is something beyond the law according to Aristotle.

Equity.

300

Name the virtue the deals with charity that is for everyone and is providing beauty to everyone.

Magnificence

300

Deliberative rhetoric can also be described as?

Political Oratory, Legislative. 

300

This is an indirect way to remember something. Sometimes people invent a story, use an acronym, or use Chunking. 

Mnemonic device.

400

Say a phrase that many teachers do not want you to use in a paper. 

"In conclusion"


"This goes to show"

400

In reference to time, when is Judicial Rhetoric talking about.

The Past.

400

Name the virtue that is about charity towards specific individuals.

Magnanimity.

400

How do we achieve The Good?

Through Virtue

500

One often finds this poetic device in The Bible. It is two phrases with similar grammatical structure that might reverse. "Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil."

Parallelism 

500

Breaking the ____________ of the law, should be equivalent to breaking the law.

Spirit

500

Name the virtue that allows us to deny pleasure.

Temperance. 

500

Mostly, what is deliberative rhetoric form in reference to time? 

The Future.