Rhetorical Vocabulary
Specific Terminology
Advertising Psychology
Persuasion Techniques
Fallacies
100

This term refers to any set of circumstances that involves at least one person using some sort of communication to modify the perspective of at least one other person or convey a message, either directly or indirectly

Rhetorical Situation

100

The appeal to time or timeliness

Kairos

100

When marketing products with multiple options, ads will limit what is shown because psychological studies have shown that people will simply not decide when too many options are present

Decision paralysis

100

"Our socks are more comfortable and long-lasting than even then most expensive name brands!"

Which persuasive technique is being used here?

Product Comparison

100

"If I don't have a coffee RIGHT NOW, I will not be able to focus and then I will fall asleep while driving and DIE."

This is an example of which fallacy? (USE THE ACTUAL NAME)

Slippery Slope

200

The problem, topic, or situation that someone is trying to address or respond to in their communication

Exigence

200

Positive feelings associated with past things such as places, movies, toys, locations, etc. 

DOUBLE JEOPARDY!

Nostalgia

200

The idea that the consumer should buy this product BECAUSE everyone else is buying it

Bandwagon Appeal

200

Gucci, Versace, Saint Laurent, and Balenciaga are all brands that have this type of appeal

Snob Appeal

200

"Yes, the Switch 2 may be $450, but who cares when it has all these amazing new games!"

Which fallacy is this?

Red Herring

300

The intended AND unintended recipients of a communication

Audience

300

The dictionary definition of a word

Denotation

300

A technique that is part of both neuromarketing and persuasion that tells the consumer that they would be X (better off, wealthier, prettier, more fit, etc.) if they owned the product

DOUBLE JEOPARDY!

Cognitive Dissonance

300

When the advertiser uses images or words with explicitly POSITIVE OR NEGATIVE CONNOTATION to make the consumer associate the product with a specific emotion. This is extremely common in car commercials

Transfer

300
"I am going to buy this new face cream because Sabrina Carpenter was in the commercial for it"


Which fallacy is this?

Appeal to authority
400

Limits on the way a discourse is presented or communicated

Constraints

400

Charli XCX, Chappell Roam, and Lady Gaga all utilize these on stage and change them from album to album

Persona

400

MOVIE TRAILERS use this to “tease” the audience into watching the movie by leaving questions or detailed unanswered

Zeigarnik Effect

400

These are ads that specifically use the word “YOU” as a way to directly involve the audience with the product to make it more logically useful and “obtainable” to the consume

DOUBLE JEOPARDY!

Audience control

400

Which fallacy occurs when someone justifies their argument because of the time, money, and effort that has already been put into it

Sunk Cost Fallacy

500

A general framework that helps you analyze the different elements of a piece of communication and how they work together

Rhetorical triangle

500

The connotation of words can be divided into these three categories

Positive, Negative, Neutral

500

When a company creates a brand persona for itself or for a specific product to associate certain ideas, feelings, or assumptions with it

Classical Conditioning


500

Color Coding, Transfer, and Use of Humor are all part of this larger category of persuasion

Pathos

500

"My opponent's words cannot be trusted. He watches anime."

Which fallacy is this?

DOUBLE JEOPARDY!

Ad hominem