Definitional - Simple, strong statements that present a verifiable fact. Should be supported with evidence and examples. , Cause and Effect - Specific actions lead to desirable or undesirable outcomes. , Comparison - Comparing a group, person or situation to another in order to highlight similarities or differences. , Evidence and Examples - Using statistics and research. , Rebuttal - Use logical arguments to show flaws in opposing arguments. , Speculative - Using a logical understanding of what is already happening to imagine ‘what if?’, Self-Interest - Promoting the need of the audience to look after themselves first., Humour - Including ridicule, irony, satire, mockery and parody. , Adversarial rheoric - Attaching negative attributes to a group of people; making them an enemy. , Personal attack - Attaching negative attributes to a specific person with opposing ideas. , Psychological appeals - Common psychological needs, including security, popularity and belonging. , Emotive words - Words that invoke emotion (affect). , Inclusive rhetoric - Use of language that makes direct links to specific social and cultural groups. Uses words such as ‘us’, ‘we’ and ‘friends’ to include people. , Testimonial - Using evidence from events in someone’s life. , Patriotism and nationalism - Appealing to the audience’s national identity., Progress - Encouraging the need for things to get better. , History and Tradition - Using evidence from history to support an argument. , Authority - Using experts, government or well-known figures. , Values - Qualities given to a person, place, object, or society. For example, common sense, justice, decency, and morality. , Poetic Techniques - Painting a word picture of a scene or action, including sound devices (alliteration, onomatopoeia, rhyme) and imagery (similes, metaphors, sensory imagery, analogies, contrasts)., Pun - Also known as ‘a play on words’ or a ‘double entendre’. Intentionally using words which have a double meaning – often leading to humour and often used in news headlines. , Exaggeration - Also known as hyperbole. Overstating and exaggerating facts or information. , Rhetorical Questions - Asking a question for effect, with no answer expected. , Repetition - Intentional repeating – and variation - of words, phrases, arguments or evidence. This includes tricolon, parallel construction, anaphora and epistrophe. , Modality - Words (usually verbs and adverbs) that indicate varying degrees of possibility, probability and obligation. , Command Verb - Also known as imperatives; exhort the reader to take action. Tone may be gently encouraging or strident.,
0%
Rhetoric - Techniques
Teilen
Teilen
Teilen
von
Mspouwbray
Inhalt bearbeiten
Drucken
Einbetten
Mehr
Zuweisungen
Bestenliste
Mehr anzeigen
Weniger anzeigen
Diese Bestenliste ist derzeit privat. Klicke auf
Teilen
um sie öffentlich zu machen.
Diese Bestenliste wurde vom Eigentümer der Ressource deaktiviert.
Diese Bestenliste ist deaktiviert, da sich Ihre Einstellungen von denen des Eigentümer der Ressource unterscheiden.
Einstellungen zurücksetzen
It's a Match
ist eine Vorlage mit offenem Ende. Es generiert keine Punkte für eine Bestenliste.
Anmelden erforderlich
Visueller Stil
Schriftarten
Abonnement erforderlich
Einstellungen
Vorlage ändern
Alle anzeigen
Weitere Formate werden angezeigt, wenn du die Aktivität spielst.
Offene Ergebnisse
Link kopieren
QR-Code
Löschen
Soll die automatisch gespeicherte Aktivität
wiederhergestellt werden?