1/96
Looks like no tags are added yet.
Name | Mastery | Learn | Test | Matching | Spaced |
|---|
No study sessions yet.
Allegory
A piece of visual or narrative media uses one thing to “stand in for” a different, hidden idea. It’s a little bit like an algebraic equation, like y = 2x, but in the form of art. Like in algebra, when we talk about meaning in allegory, we have two different variables we’re thinking about, but we don’t call them X and Y. Instead, we call them the tenor and the vehicle. A “tenor” is the “hidden” concept, object, idea, or ulterior meaning; and the “vehicle” is the word, image, or narrative in the story that “carries” it.
alliteration
The repetition of consonant sounds at the beginning or in the middle of two or more adjacent words.
allusion
A reference to a written or spoken text to another text or to some particular body of knowledge
anadiplosis
The repetition of the last word of one clause at the beginning of the following clause.
anaphora
The repetition of a group of words at the beginning of successive clauses.
anecdote
A brief narrative offered in a text to capture the audience's attention or to support a generalization or claim
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
antimetabole
he 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.
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.”
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.”
apologist
A person or character who makes a case for some controversial, even contentious, position
apology
An elaborate statement justifying some controversial, even contentious, position.
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.”
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.
2. appositive: A noun or noun phrase that follows another noun immediately or defines or
amplifies its meaning.
appositive
A noun or noun phrase that follows another noun immediately or defines or
amplifies its meaning.
argument
A carefully constructed, well-supported representation of how a writer sees
an issue, problem, or subject
arrangement
In a spoken or written text, the placement of ideas for effect
assonance
The repetition of vowel sounds in the stressed syllables of two or more
adjacent words.
assumption
An opinion, a perspective, or a belief that a writer or speaker thinks the
audience holds.
asyndeton
The omission of conjunctions between related clauses-for example, "I came,
I saw, I conquered
attitude
the manner in which an action is carried out.
audience
The person or persons who listen to a spoken text or read a written one and
are capable of responding to it.
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.
claim
The ultimate conclusion, generalization, or point that a syllogism or enthymeme
expresses. The point, backed up by support, of an argument.
aesthetic reading
Reading to experience the world of the text.
complex sentence
A sentence with one independent clauses and
one or more dependent clauses.
compound-complex sentence
A sentence with two or more independent clauses and
one or more dependent clauses.
compound sentence
A sentence with two or more independent clauses.
compound subject
The construction in which two or more nouns, noun phrases, or
noun clauses constitute the grammatical subject of a clause.
conflict
The struggle of characters with themselves, with others, or with the world
around them
connotation
The implied meaning of a word, in contrast to its directly expressed
"dictionary meaning."
context
The convergence of time, place, audience, and motivating factors in which a
piece of writing or a speech is situated
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.
data (as evidence)
Facts, statistics, and examples that a speaker or writer offers in
support of a claim, generalization, or conclusion.
deductive reasoning
Reasoning that begins with a general principle and concludes
with a specific instance that demonstrates the general principle.
delivery
The presentation and format of a composition.
denotation
The "dictionary definition" of a word, in contrast to its implied meaning
diction
Word choice, which is viewed on scales of formality/ informality, concreteness/
abstraction, derivation, and denotative/connotative value.
double entendre
The double (or multiple) meanings of a group of words that the
speaker or writer has purposely left ambiguous.
effect
The emotional or psychological impact a text has on a reader or listener.
efferent reading
Reading to garner information from a text. Reading to "take away"
particular bits of information. Here, the reader is not interested in the rhythms of the
language or the prose style but is focused on obtaining a piece of information.
ellipsis
The omission of words, the meaning of which is provided by the overall context
of a passage
enthymeme
Logical reasoning with one premise left unstated.
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."
epithet
A word or phrase adding a characteristic to a person's name-for example,
"Richard the Lion-Hearted."
Ethos
The appeal of a text to the credibility and character of the speaker, writer, or
narrator.
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.
evidence
The facts, statistics, anecdotes and examples that a speaker or writer offers in
support of a claim, generalization, or conclusion..
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.
extended example
An example that is carried through several sentences or paragraphs.
Fable
A narrative in which fictional characters often animals take actions that have
ethical or moral significance
generalization
A point that a speaker or writer generates on the basis of considering a
number of particular examples.
genre
A piece of writing classified by type-for example, letter, narrative, eulogy, or
editorial.
heuristic
A systematic strategy or method for solving problems
hyperbole
An exaggeration for effect.
image
A passage of text that evokes sensation or emotional intensity.
imagery
Language that evokes particular sensations or emotionally rich experiences in
a reader.
implied metaphor
A metaphor embedded in a sentence rather than expressed directly
as a sentence. For example, His voice cascaded through the hallways” contains an
implied metaphor; “His voice was a cascade of emotion” contains a direct metaphor.
inductive reasoning
Reasoning that begins by citing a number of specific instances or
examples and then shows how collectively they constitute a general principle.
inference
A conclusion that a reader or listener reaches by means of their own thinking
rather than by being told directly by a text.
irony
Writing or speaking that implies the contrary of what is actually written or spoken.
jargon
The specialized vocabulary of a particular group
litotes
Understatement---for example, "Her performance ran the gamut of
emotion from A to B."
logic
The art of reasoning.
logos
The appeal of a text based on the logical structure of its argument or central
ideas.
loose sentence
A sentence that adds modifying elements after the subject, verb, and
complement.
metonymy
An entity referred to by one of its attributes or
associations-for example, "The admissions office claims applications have risen.”
mnemonic device
A systematic aid to memory.
mood
The feeling that a text is intended to produce in the audience.
narrative intrusion
A comment that is made directly to the reader by breaking into the
forward plot movement.
oxymoron
Juxtaposed words with seemingly contradictory meanings-for example,
"jumbo shrimp."
paradox
A statement that seems untrue on the surface but is true nevertheless.
parallelism
A set of similarly structured words, phrases, or clauses that appears in a
sentence or paragraph. Parallelism is the repetition of grammatical elements in a piece
of writing to create a harmonious effect. Sometimes, it involves repeating the exact same
words, such as in the common phrases “easy come, easy go” and “veni, vidi, vici” (“I
came, I saw, I conquered”). Other times, it involves echoing the pattern of construction,
meter, or meaning.
pathos
The appeal of a text to the emotions, values, or interests of the audience.
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. For
example, "Pete Rose-better known as Charlie Hustle” or "That young pop singer thinks
she's a real Madonna, doesn't she?"
persona
The character that a writer or speaker conveys to the audience
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. Also called aim and
intention.
recursive
Referring to the moving back and forth from invention to revision in the
process of writing.
refutation
the part of a speech in which the speaker would anticipate objections to the
points being raised and counter them.
repetition
a text repeated use of sounds, words, phrases, or clauses to emphasize
meaning or achieve effect.
rhetoric
The art of analyzing all the choices involving language that a writer, speaker,
reader, or listener might make in a situation so that the text becomes meaningful,
purposeful, and effective; the specific features of texts, written or spoken, that cause
them to be meaningful, purposeful, and effective for readers or listeners in a situation
rhetorical choices
choices a writer or speaker makes to achieve meaning,
purpose, or effect.
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.
rhetorical situation
The convergence in a situation of exigency (the need to write),
audience, and purpose.
sarcasm
The use of mockery or bitter irony.
simile
A type of comparison that uses the word like or as.
simple sentence
A sentence with one independent clause and no dependent clause
stance
A writer's or speaker's apparent attitude toward the audience.
style
The choices that writers or speakers make in language for effect.
subordinate clause
A group of words that includes a subject and verb but that cannot
stand on its own as a sentence; also called dependent clause.
synecdoche
A part of something used to refer to the whole-for
example, "50 head of cattle" referring to 50 complete animals.
syntax
The order of words in a sentence.
tone
The writer's or speaker's attitude toward the subject matter.
understatement
Deliberate playing down of a situation in order to make a point "As the
principal dancer, Joe displayed only two flaws: his arms and his legs.”
verisimilitude
The quality of a text that reflects the truth of actual experience.
voice
THe textual features, such as diction and sentence structure, that convey a
writer’s or a speaker’s persona.
zeugma
A trope in which one word, usually a noun or the main verb, governs two other
words not related in meaning ("He maintained a business and his innocence ") .