Rhetorical Terms Test #5 (Full)

0.0(0)
studied byStudied by 0 people
0.0(0)
full-widthCall Kai
learnLearn
examPractice Test
spaced repetitionSpaced Repetition
heart puzzleMatch
flashcardsFlashcards
GameKnowt Play
Card Sorting

1/96

encourage image

There's no tags or description

Looks like no tags are added yet.

Study Analytics
Name
Mastery
Learn
Test
Matching
Spaced

No study sessions yet.

97 Terms

1
New cards

litotes

Understatement---for example, 'Her performance ran the gamut of emotion from A to B.'

2
New cards

logic

The art of reasoning.

3
New cards

logos

The appeal of a text based on the logical structure of its argument or central ideas.

4
New cards

loose sentence

A sentence that adds modifying elements after the subject, verb, and complement.

5
New cards

metonymy

An entity referred to by one of its attributes or associations-for example, 'The admissions office claims applications have risen.'

6
New cards

mnemonic device

A systematic aid to memory.

7
New cards

mood

The feeling that a text is intended to produce in the audience.

8
New cards

narrative intrusion

A comment that is made directly to the reader by breaking into the forward plot movement.

9
New cards

oxymoron

Juxtaposed words with seemingly contradictory meanings-for example, 'jumbo shrimp.'

10
New cards

paradox

A statement that seems untrue on the surface but is true nevertheless.

11
New cards

parallelism

A set of similarly structured words, phrases, or clauses that appears in a sentence or paragraph.

12
New cards

pathos

The appeal of a text to the emotions, values, or interests of the audience.

13
New cards

periodic sentence

A sentence with modifying elements included before the verb and/or complement.

14
New cards

Periphrasis

The substitution of an attributive word or phrase for a proper name, or the use of a proper name to suggest a personality characteristic.

15
New cards

persona

The character that a writer or speaker conveys to the audience.

16
New cards

purpose

The goal a writer or speaker hopes to achieve with the text-for example, to clarify difficult material, to inform, to convince, and/or persuade.

17
New cards

recursive

Referring to the moving back and forth from invention to revision in the process of writing.

18
New cards

refutation

The part of a speech in which the speaker would anticipate objections to the points being raised and counter them.

19
New cards

repetition

A text's repeated use of sounds, words, phrases, or clauses to emphasize meaning or achieve effect.

20
New cards

rhetoric

The art of analyzing all the choices involving language that a writer, speaker, reader, or listener might make in a situation.

21
New cards

rhetorical choices

The particular choices a writer or speaker makes to achieve meaning, purpose, or effect.

22
New cards

rhetorical question

A question posed by the speaker or writer not to seek an answer but instead to affirm or deny a point simply by asking a question about it.

23
New cards

rhetorical situation

The convergence in a situation of exigency (the need to write), audience, and purpose.

24
New cards

sarcasm

The use of mockery or bitter irony.

25
New cards

simile

A type of comparison that uses the word like or as.

26
New cards

simple sentence

A sentence with one independent clause and no dependent clause.

27
New cards

stance

A writer's or speaker's apparent attitude toward the audience.

28
New cards

style

The choices that writers or speakers make in language for effect.

29
New cards

subordinate clause

A group of words that includes a subject and verb but that cannot stand on its own as a sentence.

30
New cards

synecdoche

A part of something used to refer to the whole-for example, '50 head of cattle' referring to 50 complete animals.

31
New cards

syntax

The order of words in a sentence.

32
New cards

tone

The writer's or speaker's attitude toward the subject matter.

33
New cards

understatement

Deliberate playing down of a situation in order to make a point.

34
New cards

verisimilitude

The quality of a text that reflects the truth of actual experience.

35
New cards

voice

The textual features, such as diction and sentence structure, that convey a writer's or a speaker's persona.

36
New cards

zeugma

A trope in which one word, usually a noun or the main verb, governs two other words not related in meaning.

37
New cards

antimetabole

The repetition of words in successive clauses in reverse grammatical order-for example, 'You can take the boy out of the country, but you can't take the country out of the boy.'

38
New cards

antithesis

The juxtaposition of contrasting words or ideas, often in parallel structure-for example, 'Place your virtues on a pedestal; put your vices under a rock.'

39
New cards

Anthimeria

The substitution of one part of speech for another-for example, 'The poet says we 'milestone our lives.' or 'The little old lady turtled down the road.'

40
New cards

apologist

A person or character who makes a case for some controversial, even contentious, position.

41
New cards

apology

An elaborate statement justifying some controversial, even contentious, position.

42
New cards

appeal to authority

In a text, the reference to words, action, or beliefs of a person in authority as a means of supporting a claim, generalization, or conclusion.

43
New cards

appositive

A noun or noun phrase that follows another noun immediately or defines or amplifies its meaning.

44
New cards

argument

A carefully constructed, well-supported representation of how a writer sees an issue, problem, or subject.

45
New cards

arrangement

In a spoken or written text, the placement of ideas for effect.

46
New cards

assonance

The repetition of vowel sounds in the stressed syllables of two or more adjacent words.

47
New cards

assumption

An opinion, a perspective, or a belief that a writer or speaker thinks the audience holds.

48
New cards

asyndeton

The omission of conjunctions between related clauses-for example, 'I came, I saw, I conquered.'

49
New cards

attitude

The manner in which an action is carried out.

50
New cards

audience

The person or persons who listen to a spoken text or read a written one and are capable of responding to it.

51
New cards

begging of the question

The situation that results when a writer or speaker constructs an argument on an assumption that the audience does not accept.

52
New cards

claim

The ultimate conclusion, generalization, or point that a syllogism or enthymeme expresses. The point, backed up by support, of an argument.

53
New cards

aesthetic reading

Reading to experience the world of the text.

54
New cards

complex sentence

A sentence with one independent clause and one or more dependent clauses.

55
New cards

compound-complex sentence

A sentence with two or more independent clauses and one or more dependent clauses.

56
New cards

compound sentence

A sentence with two or more independent clauses.

57
New cards

compound subject

The construction in which two or more nouns, noun phrases, or noun clauses constitute the grammatical subject of a clause.

58
New cards

conflict

The struggle of characters with themselves, with others, or with the world around them.

59
New cards

connotation

The implied meaning of a word, in contrast to its directly expressed 'dictionary meaning.'

60
New cards

context

The convergence of time, place, audience, and motivating factors in which a piece of writing or a speech is situated.

61
New cards

contradiction

One of the types of rhetorical invention included under the common topic of relationships. Contradiction urges the speaker or writer to invent an example or a proof that is counter to the main idea or argument.

62
New cards

data (as evidence)

Facts, statistics, and examples that a speaker or writer offers in support of a claim, generalization, or conclusion.

63
New cards

deductive reasoning

Reasoning that begins with a general principle and concludes with a specific instance that demonstrates the general principle.

64
New cards

delivery

The presentation and format of a composition.

65
New cards

denotation

The 'dictionary definition' of a word, in contrast to its implied meaning.

66
New cards

diction

Word choice, which is viewed on scales of formality/informality, concreteness/abstraction, derivation, and denotative/connotative value.

67
New cards

double entendre

The double (or multiple) meanings of a group of words that the speaker or writer has purposely left ambiguous.

68
New cards

effect

The emotional or psychological impact a text has on a reader or listener.

69
New cards

efferent reading

Reading to garner information from a text. Reading to 'take away' particular bits of information.

70
New cards

ellipsis

The omission of words, the meaning of which is provided by the overall context of a passage.

71
New cards

enthymeme

Logical reasoning with one premise left unstated.

72
New cards

epistrophe

The repetition of a group of words at the end of successive clauses-for example, 'They saw no evil, they spoke no evil, and they heard no evil.'

73
New cards

epithet

A word or phrase adding a characteristic to a person's name-for example, 'Richard the Lion-Hearted.'

74
New cards

ethos

The appeal of a text to the credibility and character of the speaker, writer, or narrator.

75
New cards

euphemism

An indirect expression of unpleasant information in such a way to lessen its impact--for example, saying a person's position was eliminated rather than saying the person was fired.

76
New cards

evidence

The facts, statistics, anecdotes and examples that a speaker or writer offers in support of a claim, generalization, or conclusion.

77
New cards

extended analogy

An extended passage arguing that if two things are similar in one or two ways, they are probably similar in other ways as well.

78
New cards

extended example

An example that is carried through several sentences or paragraphs.

79
New cards

fable

A narrative in which fictional characters often animals take actions that have ethical or moral significance.

80
New cards

generalization

A point that a speaker or writer generates on the basis of considering a number of particular examples.

81
New cards

genre

A piece of writing classified by type-for example, letter, narrative, eulogy, or editorial.

82
New cards

heuristic

A systematic strategy or method for solving problems.

83
New cards

hyperbole

An exaggeration for effect.

84
New cards

image

A passage of text that evokes sensation or emotional intensity.

85
New cards

imagery

Language that evokes particular sensations or emotionally rich experiences in a reader.

86
New cards

implied metaphor

A metaphor embedded in a sentence rather than expressed directly as a sentence.

87
New cards

inductive reasoning

Reasoning that begins by citing a number of specific instances or examples and then shows how collectively they constitute a general principle.

88
New cards

inference

A conclusion that a reader or listener reaches by means of their own thinking rather than by being told directly by a text.

89
New cards

irony

Writing or speaking that implies the contrary of what is actually written or spoken.

90
New cards

jargon

The specialized vocabulary of a particular group.

91
New cards

Allegory

A piece of visual or narrative media uses one thing to “stand in for” a different, hidden idea.

92
New cards

Anticipated Objection

The technique a writer or speaker uses in an argumentative text to address and answer objections, even though the audience has not had the opportunity to voice these objections.

93
New cards

Alliteration

The repetition of consonant sounds at the beginning or in the middle of two or more adjacent words.

94
New cards

Allusion

A reference to a written or spoken text to another text or to some particular body of knowledge.

95
New cards

Anadiplosis

The repetition of the last word of one clause at the beginning of the following clause.

96
New cards

Anaphora

The repetition of a group of words at the beginning of successive clauses.

97
New cards

Anecdote

A brief narrative offered in a text to capture the audience's attention or to support a generalization or claim.