AP Lang Rhetorical Devices

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98 Terms

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Thesis

The central claim and overall purpose of a work

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Bias

a predisposition or subjective opinion

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Call to action

Writing that urges readers to action or promote a change.

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Anecdote

A short account of an interesting or humorous incident, intended to illustrate or support a point.

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Analogy

A comparison to a directly parallel case; the process of drawing a comparison between two things based on a partial similarity of like features.

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Idiom

An expression that means something other than the literal meanings of its individual words.

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Tone

the voice and attitude the writer has chosen to project.

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Mood

The overall atmosphere of a work and the mood is how that atmosphere makes a reader feel.

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Antithesis

A contrast in language to bring out a contrast in

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ideas.

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Allusion

a brief reference to a person, event, or place - real or fictitious - or to a work of art.

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Generalization

When a writer bases a claim upon an isolated example or asserts

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that a claim is certain rather than probable.

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Juxtaposition

Placing two ideas side by side or close together.

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Anticipating Audience Response

The rhetorical technique of anticipating counterarguments and

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offering a refutation.

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Euphemism

Substitutions of an inoffensive, indirect, or agreeable expression

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for a word or phrase perceived as socially unacceptable or harsh.

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Paradox

a phrase or statement that while seeming contradictory or absurd may actually be well founded or true. Used to attract attention or to secure emphasis

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Motif

recurrent images, words, objects, phrases, or actions that tend to

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unify the work.

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Persona

the character that the speaker portrays.

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Cliche

A timeworn expression that through overuse has lost its power to

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evoke concrete images.

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Irony

The discrepancy between appearance and reality: verbal, situational, dramatic.

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Oxymoron

a self contradictory combination of words.

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Logos

Appealing to logical reasoning and sound evidence

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Ethos

appealing to the audience's shared values

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Pathos

Evoking and manipulating emotions

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Aphorism

A concise or tersely phrased statement in principle, truth, or opinion. Often found in fields like law, politics, and art

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Lending Credence

In arguing a point, a speaker should always lend his opponent some credit for his/her ideas. In this way, the speaker persuades the audience that he is fair and has done the research, thereby strengthening the argument.

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Rhetorical Question

A question asked solely to produce an effect and not to elicit

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a reply.

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Refutation

When a writer delivers relevant opposing arguments.

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Allegory

A narrative in which character, action, and setting represent abstract concepts apart from the literal meaning of a story. The underlying meaning usually has a moral, social, religious, or political significance

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Syllogism

A formula for presenting an argument logically. In its simplest form, it consists of three divisions: a major premise, a minor premise, and a conclusion.

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Metonymy

The substitution of a term naming an object closely associated with the word in mind for the word itself.

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Claim of Value

Claims involving opinions, attitudes, and subjective evaluation

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Claim of policy

claims advocating courses of action that should or should not be undertaken

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Claim of Value/Judgement

claims involving opinions, attitudes, and

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subjective evaluations of

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things

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Claim of definition

claims exploring what something means or what something is made up of

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Grounds

the evidence offered in support of a claim

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Warrant

the assumption the speaker makes about the audience

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Qualifier

a statement that indicates the force of the argument

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Declarative Sentence

makes a statement (sentence type)

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Interrogative Sentence

asks a question (sentence type)

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Imperative sentence

gives a command (sentence type)

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Exclamatory sentence

makes an interjection (Sentence type)

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Narration

A story presenting events in an orderly, logical sequence.

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Description

Using sensory language and physical

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characteristics of a person, place, or thing to communicate to readers.

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Classification and Division

Division is the process of breaking down a

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whole into smaller parts;

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Classification is the process of sorting

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individual items into categories.

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Definition

Explaining what something, or even someone, is - that is, its essential nature.

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Exemplification

Writing that provides a series of facts, specific cases, or instances that relate to a general idea.

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Compare/Contrast

Writing that highlights the similarities and differences between 2 or more topics

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Process Analysis

Text that explains how to do something or

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how something occurs.

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Deductive reasoning

Method of reasoning that moves

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from a general premise to a specific

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conclusion.

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Inductive Reasoning

Method of reasoning that moves

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from specific evidence to a general conclusion based on this evidence.

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Diction

choice of words in a work and an important element of style.

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Abstract Language

Language describing ideas and qualities

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Concrete Language

Language describing observable, specific things.

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Colloquialism

words characteristic to familiar conversation

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Denotation

specific, exact meaning of a word as defined

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Connotation

The emotional implications that a word may carry

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Polysyndeton

repetition of conjunctions inc lose succession

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Synecdoche

part is used for a whole or the whole for a part

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Satire

genre of writing used to critique or ridicule through humor or sarcasm

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Parody

exaggerated imitation of a serious work or subject

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Syntax

how a sentence is constructed

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Simple sentence

a complete sentence that is neither compound, nor complex. (1 subject, 1 predicate.)

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Compound sentence

a sentence that contains 2 independent clauses joined by a coordinating conjunction.

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Complex sentence

An independent clause joined by one or more dependent clauses.

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Antecedent

the word to which a pronoun refers

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Parallelism

when the arrangement of parts of a sentence is similarly phrased or constructed

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Loose sentence

When a sentence is grammatically complete before its end

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Periodic sentence

when a sentence is not grammatically complete before its end

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Anaphora

the same expression is repeated at the beginning of 2 or more consecutive lines

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Chiasmus

second half of an expression is balanced against the first, but with the parts reversed

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Anastrophe

any variation of the normal word order

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Freight Train Sentence

3 or more very short independent clauses joined by conjunctions

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Litotes

a form of understatement in which a thing is affirmed by stating the negative of its opposite

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Either-or reasoning

reducing an argument to two polar opposites and ignoring any alternatives or middle ground

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Ad Hominem

attacking a person's motives or character instead of his argument or claims

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False Analogy

When 2 cases are not sufficiently parallel

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Non Sequitur

introducing irrelevant evidence to support a claim

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Red Herring

something used to distract the audience's attention from the real issue or argument

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Slippery Slope

failure to provide evidence showing that one event will lead to a chain of events

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Straw Man

misrepresenting opponent's position to make it easier to attack (taking things out of context)