Persuasive Techniques 1
Persuasive Techniques 2
Persuasive Techniques 3
Persuasive Techniques 4
100

appeal to logic, reason

logos

100

using absolute words such as "only," "all," "every"

generalization 

100

repeating a word, phrase, or sentence for emphasis

repetition

100

a personal experience or story

anecdote

200

a question that isn't answered because the answer is so obvious

rhetorical question

200

language that appeals to the readers' senses; language that creates an image for the audience

imagery

200

appeal to traditional wisdom, authority, ethics

ethos

200

when you overstate your point, an exaggeration

 exaggerration

300

I/you/we/she/he/them, Example: We are all in this together;we stand united.

personal pronouns

300

repetition of consonant sounds

alliteration

300

comparing two things without using "like" or "as"

simile

300

words charged with an underlying meaning or implication, Example:illegal alien

loaded words

400

opinions that are credible because of the specialized experience of the person giving it

expert opinion

400

Presenting an idea as fact without explanation Example: We make the world's best coffee

assertion

400

using repeated letters or sounds to create impact

alliteration

400

when three adjectives or phrases are listed, Example: She is cool, calm and collected.

groups of three

500

the quality of being trusted and believed, Example: as your teacher, you can trust me.

credibility

500

the explicit statement of what you want your audience to do after hearing your argument

call to action

500

appeal to emotions: fear, anger, compassion, sympathy, etc.

pathos

500

the reoccurance of words or phrases, Example: Never give up; never give in. Never.

repetition