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alliteration
The repetition of the same sound or letter at the beginning of consecutive words or syllables.
allusion
An indirect reference, often to another text or an historic event.
analogy
An extended comparison between two seemingly dissimilar things.
anaphora
The repetition of words at the beginning of successive clauses.
anecdote
A short account of an interesting event.
annotation
Explanatory or critical notes added to a text.
antecedent
The noun to which a later pronoun refers.
antimetabolc
The repetition of words in an inverted order to sharpen a contrast.
antithesis
Parallel structure that juxtaposes contrasting ideas.
aphorism
A short, astute statement of a general truth.
appositive
A word or phrase that renames a nearby noun or pronoun.
archaic diction
The use of words common to an earlier time period; antiquated language.
argument
A statement put forth and supported by evidence.
Aristotelian triangle
A diagram that represents a rhetorical situation as the relationship among the speaker, the subject, and the audience (see rhetorical triangle).
assertion
An emphatic statement; declaration. An assertion supported by evidence becomes an argument.
assumption
A belief or statement taken for granted without proof.
asyndeton
Leaving out conjunctions between words, phrases, clauses.
attitude
The speaker's position on a subject as revealed through his or her tone.
audience
One's listener or readership; those to whom a speech or piece of writing is addressed.
authority
A reliable, respected source — someone with knowledge.
bias
Prejudice or predisposition toward one side of a subject or issue.
cite
Identifying a part of a piece of writing as being derived from a source.
claim
An assertion, usually supported by evidence.
close reading
A careful reading that is attentive to organization, figurative language, sentence structure, vocabulary, and other literary and structural elements of a text.
colloquial/ism
An informal or conversational use of language.
common ground
Shared beliefs, values, or positions.
complex sentence
A sentence that includes one independent clause and at least one dependent clause,
concession
A reluctant acknowledgment or yielding.
connotation
That which is implied by a word, as opposed to the word's literal meaning (see denotation).
context
Words, events, or circumstances that help determine meaning,
coordination
Grammatical equivalence between parts of a sentence, often through a coordinating conjunction such as and, or but
counterargument
A challenge to a position; an opposing argument,
credible
Worthy of belief; trustworthy.
cumulative sentence
An independent clause followed by subordinate clauses or phrases that supply additional detail,
declarative sentence
A sentence that makes a statement.
deduction
Reasoning from general to specific.
denotation
The literal meaning of a word; its dictionary definition.
dialectal journal
A double-column journal in which one writes a quotation in one column and reflections on that quotation in the other column.
diction
Word choice.
documentation
Bibliographic information about the sources used in a piece of writing.
elegiac
Mournful over what has passed or been lost; often used to describe tone,
epigram
A brief witty statement,
ethos
A Greek term referring to the character of a person; one of Aristotle's three rhetorical appeals {see logos and pathos),
explication of text
Explanation of a text's meaning through an analysis of all of its constituent parts, including the literary devices used; also called close reading.
facts
Information that is true or demonstrable.
figurative language
The use of tropes or figures of speech; going beyond literal meaning to achieve literary effect.
figure of speech
An expression that strives for literary effect rather than conveying a literal meaning.
fragment
A word, phrase, or clause that does not form a full sentence.
hortatory
Urging, or strongly encouraging,
hyperbole
Exaggeration for the purpose of emphasis.
imagery
Vivid use of language that evokes a reader's senses (sight, smell, taste, touch, hearing).
imperative sentence
A sentence that requests or commands.
induction
Reasoning from specific to general.
inversion
A sentence in which the verb precedes the subject.
irony
A contradiction between what is said and what is meant; incongruity between action and result.
juxtaposition
Placement of two things side by side for emphasis.
logos
A Greek term that means "word"; an appeal to logic; one of Aristotle's three rhetorical appeals (see ethos and pathos).
metaphor
A figure of speech or trope through which one thing is spoken of as though it were something else, thus making an implicit comparison.
metonymy
Use of an aspect of something to represent the whole.
modifier
A word, phrase, or clause that qualifies or describes another word, phrase, or clause.
narration
Retelling an event or series of events.
iiuminalization
Turning a verb or adjective into a noun.
occasion
An aspect of context; the cause or reason for writing.
omniscient narrator
An all-knowing, usually third-person narrator.
oxymoron
A figure of speech that combines two contradictory terms.
pacing
The relative speed or slowness with which a story is told or an idea is presented.
paradox
A statement that seems contradictoiy but is actually true.
parallelism
The repetition of similar grammatical or syntactical patterns.
parody
A piece that imitates and exaggerates the prominent features of another; used for comic effect or ridicule.
pathos
A Greek term that refers to suffering but has come to be associated with broader appeals to emotion; one of Aristotle's three rhetorical appeals (see ethos and logos).
periodic sentence
A sentence that builds toward and ends with the main clause,
persona
The speaker, voice, or character assumed by the author of a piece of writing.
personification
Assigning lifelike characteristics to inanimate objects.
polemic
An argument against an idea, usually regarding philosophy, politics, or religion.
polysyndeton
The deliberate use of a series of conjunctions.
premise;
major, minor Two parts of a syllogism. The concluding sentence of a syllogism takes its predicate from the major premise and its subject from the minor premise.
Major premise:
All mammals are warm-blooded.
Minor premise:
All horses are mammals.
Conclusion:
All horses are warm-blooded (see syllogism).
pronoun
A word used to replace a noun or noun phrase.
propaganda
A negative term for writing designed to sway opinion rather than present information.
purpose
One's intention or objective in a speech or piece of writing.
refute
To discredit an argument, particularly a counterargument.
rhetoric
The study of effective, persuasive language use; according to Aristotle, use of the "available means of persuasion."
rhetorical modes
Patterns of organization developed to achieve a specific purpose; modes include but are not limited to narration, description, comparison and contrast, cause and effect, definition, exemplification, classification and division, process analysis, and argumentation.
rhetorical question
A question asked more to produce an effect than to summon an answer.
rhetorical triangle
A diagram that represents a rhetorical situation as the relationship among the speaker, the subject, and the audience (see Aristotelian triangle).
satire
An ironic, sarcastic, or witty composition that claims to argue for something, but actually argues against it.
scheme
A pattern of words or sentence construction used for rhetorical effect.
sentence patterns
The arrangement of independent and dependent clauses into known sentence constructions — such as simple, compound, complex, or compound-complex.
sentence variety
Using a variety of sentence patterns to create a desired effect.
simile
A figure of speech that uses "like" or "as" to compare two things.
simple sentence
A statement containing a subject and predicate; an independent clause.
source
A book, article, person, or other resource consulted for information.
speaker
A term used for the author, speaker, or the person whose perspective (real or imagined) is being advanced in a speech or piece of writing.
straw man
A logical fallacy that involves the creation of an easily refutable position; misrepresenting, then attacking an opponent's position.
style
The distinctive qualitiy of speech or writing created by the selection and arrangement of words and figures of speech.
subject
In rhetoric, the topic addressed in a piece of writing.
subordinate clause
Created by a subordinating conjunction, a clause that modifies an independent clause.
subordination
The dependence of one syntactical element on another in a sentence.