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Flashcards for AP Language & Composition Rhetorical Terms.
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Alliteration
Repetition of the same sound beginning several words or syllables in sequence.
Allusion
Brief reference to a person, event, or place (real or fictitious) or to a work of art.
Ambiguity (Ambiguous)
The multiple meanings, either intentional or unintentional, of a word, phrase, sentence or passage.
Analogy
A comparison between two seemingly dissimilar things. Often, an analogy uses something simple or familiar to explain something unfamiliar or complex.
Anaphora
Repetition of a word or phrase at the beginning of successive phrases, clauses, or lines.
Anecdote
A brief story used to illustrate a point or claim.
Antimetabole
Repetition of words in reverse order.
Antithesis
Opposition, or contrast, of ideas or words in a parallel construction.
Aphorism
A terse statement of known authorship that expresses a general truth and moral principle.
Archaic Diction
Old-fashioned or outdated choice of words.
Argument
A process of reasoned inquiry. A persuasive discourse resulting in a coherent and consideration movement from a claim to a conclusion.
Assertion
A statement that presents a claim or thesis.
Asyndeton
Omission of conjunction between coordinate phrases, clauses, or words.
Audience
The listener, viewer, or reader of a text. Most texts are likely to have multiple audiences.
Claim
Also called an assertion or proposition, a claim states the argument’s main idea or position. A claim differs from a topic or subject in that a claim has to be arguable.
Closed Thesis
A closed thesis is a statement of the main idea of the argument that also previews the major points the writer intends to make.
Colloquialism (Colloquial Speech)
Words or phrases that have a conversational feel and are not generally used in formal written English.
Connotation
Meanings or associations that readers have with a word beyond its dictionary definition, or denotation. Connotations are often positive or negative, and they often greatly affect the author’s tone.
Context
The circumstances, atmosphere, attitudes, and events surrounding a text.
Cumulative Sentence
Sentence that completes the main idea at the beginning of the sentence and then builds and adds on.
Denotation
The strict, literal dictionary definition of a word, devoid of any emotion, attitude or color.
Diction
A speaker’s choice of words. Analysis of diction looks at these choices and what they add to the speaker’s message.
Emphasis
Emphasis allows the writer to place importance on a particular idea.
Ethos
Greek for “character.” Speakers appeal to ethos to demonstrate that they are credible and trustworthy to speak on a given topic. Ethos is established by both who you are and what you say.
Euphemism
Greek for “good speech,” euphemisms are a more agreeable or less offensive substitute for generally unpleasant words or concepts. May be used to adhere to political correctness or to add humor or ironic understatement.
Figurative Language (figure of speech)
Nonliteral language, sometimes referred to as tropes or metaphorical language, often evoking strong imagery, figures of speech often compare one thing to another either explicitly (simile) implicitly (metaphor). Other forms of figurative language include personification, paradox, overstatement (hyperbole), understatement, metonymy, synecdoche, and irony.
Hyperbole
Deliberate exaggeration used for emphasis or to produce a comic or ironic effect; an overstatement to make a point.
Imagery
A description of how something looks, feels, tastes, smells, or sounds. Imagery may use literal or figurative language to appeal to the senses.
Irony
A figure of speech that occurs when a speaker or character says one thing but means something else, or when what is said is the opposite of what is expected, creating a noticeable incongruity.
Jargon
Specialized terminology used by a particular group of people. Obscure and often pretentious language.
Juxtaposition
Placement of two things closely together to emphasize similarities or differences.
Logos
Greek for “embodied thought.” Speakers appeal to logos, or reason, by offering clear, rational ideas and using specific details, examples, facts, statistics, or expert testimony to back them up.
Metaphor
Figure of speech that compares two things without using like or as.
Metonymy
Figure of speech in which something is represented by another thing that is related to it or emblematic of it.
Mood
The feeling or atmosphere created by a text.
Narration
In classical oration, the factual and background information, establishing why a subject or problem needs addressing; it precedes the confirmation, or laying out of evidence to support claims made in the argument.
Nominalization
The process of changing a verb into a noun.
Occasion
The time and place a speech is given or a piece is written.
Open thesis
An open thesis is one that does not list all of the points the writer intends to cover in an essay.
Oxymoron
A paradox made up of two seemingly contradictory words.
Paradox
A statement or situation that is seemingly contradictory on the surface, but delivers an ironic truth.
Parallelism
Similarity of structure in a pair or series of related words, phrases, or clauses.
Pathos
Greek for “suffering” or “experience.” Speakers appeal to pathos to emotionally motivate their audience. More specific appeals to pathos might play on the audience’s values, desires, and hopes, on the one hand, or fears and prejudices, on the other.
Periodic sentence
Sentence whose main clause is withheld until the end.
Persona
Greek for “mask.” The face or character that a speaker shows to his or her audience.
Personification
Attribution of a lifelike quality to an inanimate object or an idea.
Polysyndeton
The deliberate use of multiple conjunctions between coordinate phrases, clauses, or words.
Purpose
The goal the speaker wants to achieve.
Rhetoric
Aristotle defined rhetoric as “the faculty of observing in any given case the available means of persuasion.” In other words, it is the art of finding ways of persuading an audience.
Rhetorical Appeals
Rhetorical techniques used to persuade an audience by emphasizing what they find most important or compelling. The three major appeals are to ethos (character), logos (reason), and pathos (emotion).
Rhetorical Question
Figure of speech in the form of a question posed for rhetorical effect rather than for the purpose of getting an answer.
Satire
The use of irony or sarcasm to critique society or an individual.
Simile
A figure of speech used to explain or clarify an idea by comparing it explicitly to something else, using the words like, as, or as though.
Speaker
The person or group who creates a text. This might be a politician who delivers a speech, a commentator who writes an article, an artist who draws a political cartoon, or even a company that commissions an advertisement.
Stance
A speaker’s attitude toward the audience (differing from tone, the speaker’s attitude toward the subject).
Style
A writer’s specific way of saying things. Style includes arrangement of ideas, word choice, syntax, and figurative language. We can analyze and describe an author’s personal style and make judgments on how appropriate it is to the author’s purpose.
Subject
The topic of a text. What the text is about.
Synecdoche
Figure of speech that uses a part to represent the whole.
Synthesize
Combining two or more ideas in order to create something more complex in support of a new idea.
Theme
A writer’s thoughts on a topic. It is not JUST the topic, but what the author develops in terms of what he believes about the topic.
Tone
A speaker’s attitude toward the subject conveyed by the speaker’s stylistic and rhetorical choices.
Trope
Artful diction; from the Greek word for “turning,” a figure of speech such as metaphor, simile, hyperbole, metonymy, or synecdoche.
Understatement
A figure of speech in which something is presented as less important, dire, urgent, good, and so on, than it actually is, often for satiric or comical effect. Also called litotes, it is the opposite of hyperbole.
Vernacular
The speech patterns of a particular group of people or region.
Voice
The unique flavor of a piece based upon the author. An author adds his or her voice to a piece by creating a tone with diction, syntax, imagery, etc. The author’s voice is what makes his or her writing personal and unique.
Zeugma
Use of two different words in a grammatically similar way that produces different, often incongruous, meanings.
Syntax
The arrangement of words into phrases, clauses, and sentences. This includes word order the length and structure of sentences and such schemes as parallelism, juxtaposition, antithesis, and antimetabole.
Text
While this term generally means the written word, in the humanities it has come to mean any cultural product that can be “read”— meaning not just consumed and comprehended, but investigated. This includes fiction, nonfiction, poetry, political cartoons, fine art, photography, performances, fashion, cultural trends, and much more.