rhetorical devices. affirmation pattern series of questions or statements that makes your audience...

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Rhetorical Devices

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Alliteration Repetition using the beginning consonant sounds of two or more neighboring words. EXAMPLE: The kids stampede the stuffy streets at school at South.

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Page 1: Rhetorical Devices. Affirmation Pattern Series of questions or statements that makes your audience shake their head yes. Do you like to stay up late?

Rhetorical Devices

Page 2: Rhetorical Devices. Affirmation Pattern Series of questions or statements that makes your audience shake their head yes. Do you like to stay up late?

Affirmation Pattern

Series of questions or statements that makes your audience shake their head yes.

• Do you like to stay up late?• Do you like to sleep in?• Do you like the opportunity to work when

you feel you are at your best?

Page 3: Rhetorical Devices. Affirmation Pattern Series of questions or statements that makes your audience shake their head yes. Do you like to stay up late?

Alliteration

Repetition using the beginning consonant sounds of two or more neighboring words.

EXAMPLE: The kids stampede the stuffy streets at school at South.

Page 4: Rhetorical Devices. Affirmation Pattern Series of questions or statements that makes your audience shake their head yes. Do you like to stay up late?

Allusion

is a reference to a familiar person, place, or thing.

"And I can pledge our nation to a goal: When we see that *wounded traveler on the road to Jericho, we will not pass to the other side." -- George W. Bush, 2000 Inaugural Address*reference to the Bible

Page 5: Rhetorical Devices. Affirmation Pattern Series of questions or statements that makes your audience shake their head yes. Do you like to stay up late?

Analogy

is a comparison of an unfamiliar idea to a simple, familiar one. The suggestion is sometimes lengthy with several points of comparison.

Ex: "Withdrawal of U.S. troops will become like salted peanuts to the American public; the more U.S. troops come home, the more will be demanded."

-- Henry Kissinger, Memo to President Richard Nixon, 10 September 1969.

Page 6: Rhetorical Devices. Affirmation Pattern Series of questions or statements that makes your audience shake their head yes. Do you like to stay up late?

Anecdote

is a short story told to illustrate a point.

Example: If you are giving a speech on stricter drunk driving laws, and you relate a story about a relative who was hit by a drunk driver.

Page 7: Rhetorical Devices. Affirmation Pattern Series of questions or statements that makes your audience shake their head yes. Do you like to stay up late?

Antithesis

is a figure of speech involving bringing out opposites with parallel structure and grammar, usually done within the same sentence.

Example: When there is need of silence you speak; and when there is need of speech you are silent.

Page 8: Rhetorical Devices. Affirmation Pattern Series of questions or statements that makes your audience shake their head yes. Do you like to stay up late?

Hyperbole

The counterpart of understatement—deliberately exaggerates conditions or emphasis of effect.

Example: There are 1,000 reasons why more research is needed for solar energy.

Page 9: Rhetorical Devices. Affirmation Pattern Series of questions or statements that makes your audience shake their head yes. Do you like to stay up late?

Irony (verbal)

using a word or phrase to mean the exact opposite of its literal meaning: sarcasm

Example: It was a blistering twenty-five degrees outside during the snowstorm

Page 10: Rhetorical Devices. Affirmation Pattern Series of questions or statements that makes your audience shake their head yes. Do you like to stay up late?

Metaphor

A form of figurative language which is a comparison between two seemingly unrelated subjects without using like or as.

Example: All the world’s a stage…

Page 11: Rhetorical Devices. Affirmation Pattern Series of questions or statements that makes your audience shake their head yes. Do you like to stay up late?

Negative definition

describing something by telling what it is not rather than, or in addition to, what it is.

Example: A Catholic is a Christian who is not a Protestant.

Page 12: Rhetorical Devices. Affirmation Pattern Series of questions or statements that makes your audience shake their head yes. Do you like to stay up late?

Parallel structure

is the repetition of words or phrases in meaning and/or structure.

Example: I came, I saw, I conquered

Page 13: Rhetorical Devices. Affirmation Pattern Series of questions or statements that makes your audience shake their head yes. Do you like to stay up late?

Repetition

is the uttering of the same word of phrase in order to create a sense or cadence, rhythm and emphasis.

Example: “Today, as never before, the fates of men are so intimately linkedto one another that a disaster for one is a disaster for everybody.”(Natalia Ginzburg, The Little Virtues, 1962)

Page 14: Rhetorical Devices. Affirmation Pattern Series of questions or statements that makes your audience shake their head yes. Do you like to stay up late?

Quotations

are sometimes famous words that were spoken by someone in the past. These words are highlighted in order to lend understanding or credibility to a concept the speaker is trying to convey.

Page 15: Rhetorical Devices. Affirmation Pattern Series of questions or statements that makes your audience shake their head yes. Do you like to stay up late?

Rhetorical questions

is a question posed to highlight a point, not for the purpose of eliciting a response.

Example: What are you going to do about it?