Rhetorical Appeals
Rhetorical Devices
Test Structure
Fallacies
Rhetorical Situation
100

There are this many traditional rhetorical appeals

Three

100

An indirect reference to something, usually a literary text

Allusion

100

There are this many free response questions on the AP test.

Three

100

Latin for "against the man". Personally attacking your opponents instead of their arguments

Ad hominem

100

The person or group creating the text. Their background, values, and experiences all influence their message.

Writer/Author

200

An appeal to the reader's emotions, values, or beliefs to evoke feelings such as sympathy, anger, or joy

Pathos

200

Word choice, particularly as an element of style

Diction

200

There are this many multiple choice questions on the AP test.

45

200

Arguing that something is true, good, or right simply because it is popular. The "everyone is doing it" argument.

Bandwagon

200

The intended group of people the text is directed at that directly impacts their choices. 

Audience

300

An appeal to logic, reason, and intellect

Logos

300

Placing things side by side for the purposes of comparison

Juxtaposition

300

These are the three types of essays written on the AP Test

Synthesis, Rhetorical Analysis, Argument

300

Claiming that a relatively small first step will inevitably lead to a chain of related, negative events, without enough evidence.

Slippery Slope

300

The core idea or central argument of the text. What the writer is actually saying or trying to get across.

Message

400

An appeal to an author or speaker’s credibility, authority, and character, aimed at convincing an audience that they are qualified to speak on a subject 

Ethos

400

Repetition of a word, phrase, or clause at the beginning of two or more sentences or clauses in a row

Anaphora

400

How long the AP test will take in total

3 hours 15 minutes

400

An argument that begins with the very conclusion it's trying to prove. The reasoning goes in a circle.

Circular Reasoning

400

The goal of communication. What the writer wants the reader to do or feel after reading the text. 

Purpose

500

Citing statistics, using case studies, presenting cause-and-effect, or using logical, linear arguments would all be examples of an appeal to this.

Logos

500

Accepting at least part or all of an opposing viewpoint. Often used to make one’s own argument stronger

Concession

500

Accounting for the suggested 15 minutes to read through provided materials, this is how long you have to write each individual essay

40 minutes

500

Misrepresenting or exaggerating an opponent's argument to make it easier to attack.

Straw Man

500

The spark or reason the text exists in the first place. The problem, issue, or situation that prompts someone to write or speak.

Exigence