Rhetoric 1
Rhetoric 2
Rhetoric 3
Rhetoric 4
Rhetoric 5
100

appeal to authority: credibility

ethos

100

appeals to logic

logos

100

appeals to the emotions

pathos

100

repetition of beginning consonant sounds

alliteration

100

language that appeals to one or more of the five senses

imagery

200

words that sound like they are spelled

onomatopoeia 

200

an extreme exaggeration

hyperbole

200

the opposite of what is expected actually happens

irony

200

a brief reference to someone or something in history

allusion

200

using two opposite terms side by side

oxymoron

300

device that compares two unrelated objects

acceptable: analogy, simile, metaphor

300

the provocation or inspiration for a work

exigence

300

a literary device that involves using the same word or phrase over and over again in a piece of writing or speech.

repetition

300

balancing two or more ideas or arguments that are equally important. Hint: in grammar, it means using phrasing that is grammatically similar or identical in structure, sound, meaning, or meter.

parallelism

300

using two contrasting ideas near each other to draw attention to their differences

juxtaposition

400

a short story about a real person or event, usually serving to make the listeners laugh or ponder over a topic.

anecdote

400

a rhetorical device that features repetition of a word or phrase at the beginning of successive sentences, phrases, or clauses

anaphora

400

a telegraphic sentence contains at maximum how many words?

five

400

a usually short fictitious story that illustrates a moral attitude or a religious principle

parable

400

repeated consonant sounds at the beginning of OR in the middle of words

consonance

500

type of sentence in which the main clause is delayed

periodic sentence

500

lack of conjunctions

asyndeton

500

list the 5 elements of the rhetorical situation

purpose, message, audience, context, speaker

500

occurs when someone argues that a person holds a view that is actually not what the other person believes.

straw man

500

arguing that someone is incorrect because they are unattractive, immoral, weird, or any other bad thing you could say about them as a person.

ad hominem