Rhetoric 101
Rhetorical Devices
Argument Structure
Tone
Miscellaneous
100

The art of effective speaking and writing

rhetoric

100

Comparison of two things without using “like” or “as”

metaphor

100

The main/central argument that is a statement of opinion

major claim/main claim

100

The author’s attitude toward a subject

tone

100

The person or group of people who receive the communication/text directly, and usually are the rhetor’s intended audience

primary audience
200

Someone who writes and speaks effectively

a rhetor

200

A question asked to produce an effect rather than an answer

rhetorical question

200

A supporting claim for the central argument

minor claim/subclaim

200

The author’s vocabulary/word choice

diction

200

The person or group of people who may indirectly receive a communication/text, and may not be the rhetor’s intended audience

secondary audience

300

The 3 parts of the rhetorical triangle

ethos, pathos, logos

300

Frequent use of words, places, characters, or objects that mean something beyond what they are on a literal level

symbolism

300

An explanation that supports or defends a major and/or minor claim

justification/analysis

300

An idea or feeling that a word invokes in addition to its literal or primary meaning

connotation

300

The literal or primary meaning of a word, in contrast to the feelings or ideas that the word suggests

denotation

400

The meaning of a written work according to the writer of the work

authorial intent

400

A comparison between two unlike items that is developed at great length

extended metaphor

400

A statement of opinion made in response to or to outweigh/cancel another claim

counterargument/counterclaim

400

A writer's style of writing that makes it unique

voice

400

The arrangement, order, or location of words in a sentence

syntax

500

Exposing problems with society through the use of fictional characters and events that parallel real people and events

satire

500

A recurring theme or verbal pattern in a single text or a number of different texts

motif

500

The speech act of proving a claim false by offering a counterargument

rebuttal

500

The feeling or atmosphere the text creates within the reader

mood

500

Errors in reasoning that invalidate arguments

logical fallacies