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AP Language Chapter 1 Vocabulary Flashcards

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14864439131AudienceThe listener, viewer, or reader of a text. Most texts are likely to have multiple audiences.0
14864454128ConcessionAn acknowledgement that an opposing argument may be true or reasonable. In a strong argument, this is usually accompanied by a refutation challenging the validity of the opposing argument.1
14864682204ConnotationMeanings or associations that readers have with a word beyond its dictionary definition, or denotation. Usually positive or negative, and they can greatly affect the authors tone.2
14864699715ContextThe circumstances, atmosphere, attitudes, and events surrounding a text.3
14864706598CounterargumentAn opposing argument to the one a writer is putting forward. Rather than ignoring a counterargument , a strong writer will usually address it through the process of concession and refutation.4
14864725794EthosGreek 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.5
14864744112LogosGreek 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.6
14864753681OccasionThe time and place a speech is given or a piece is written.7
14864784371PathosGreek 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.8
14864788852PersonaGreek for "mask." The face or character that a speaker shows to his or her audience.9
14864803316PolemicGreek for "hostile." An aggressive argument that tries to establish the superiority of one opinion over all others. Polemics generally do not concede that opposing opinions have any merit.10
14864808833PropagandaThe spread of ideas and information to further a cause. In its negative sense, propaganda is the use of rumors, lies, disinformation, and scare tactics in order to damage or promote a cause.11
14864815478PurposeThe goal the speaker wants to achieve.12
14864821180RefutationA denial of the validity of an opposing argument. In order to sound reasonable, refutations often follow a concession that acknowledges that an opposing argument may be true or reasonable.13
14864827562RhetoricAs Aristotle defined the term, "the faculty of observing in any given case the available means of persuasion." In other words, it is the art of finding ways to persuade an audience.14
14864858072Rhetorical AppealsRhetorical 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).15
14864865334Rhetorical Triangle (Aristotelian Triangle)A diagram that illustrates the interrelationship among the speaker, audience, and subject in determining a text.16
14864874620SOAPSA mnemonic device that stands for Subject, Occasion, Audience, Purpose, and Speaker. It is a handy way to remember the various elements that make up the rhetorical situation.17
14864882023SpeakerThe 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.18
14864885996SubjectThe topic of a text. What the text is about.19
14864888782TextWhile 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.20

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