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
공유
공유
공유
만든이
Mspouwbray
Secondary
English
콘텐츠 편집
인쇄
퍼가기
더보기
할당
순위표
더 보기
접기
이 순위표는 현재 비공개입니다.
공유
를 클릭하여 공개할 수 있습니다.
자료 소유자가 이 순위표를 비활성화했습니다.
옵션이 자료 소유자와 다르기 때문에 이 순위표가 비활성화됩니다.
옵션 되돌리기
매치업
(은)는 개방형 템플릿입니다. 순위표에 올라가는 점수를 산출하지 않습니다.
로그인이 필요합니다
비주얼 스타일
글꼴
구독 필요
옵션
템플릿 전환하기
모두 표시
액티비티를 플레이할 때 더 많은 포맷이 나타납니다.
결과 열기
링크 복사
QR 코드
삭제
자동 저장된
게임을 복구할까요?