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December 12 Terms

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the study of effective, persuasive language use; according to Aristotle it is the "available means of persuasion"
patterns of organization developed to achieve a specific purpose; examples include narration, description, comparison, contrast, cause/effect, definition, argumentation
question asked to produce an effect rather than an answer
diagram to represent a rhetorical situation as the relationship among speaker, subject, and audience
ironic, sarcastic, or witty composition that claims to argue for something but actually argues against it
pattern of words or sentence construction used for rhetorical effect
arrangement of independent and dependent clauses into known sentence constructions
using variety of sentence patterns to create a desired effect
figure of speech using "like" or "as" to compare two things
statement with subject and predicate; independent clause
book, article, person consulted for intormation
term for author, speaker, or person whose perspective is being advanced in a speech or piece of writing
logical fallacy involving the creation of an easily refutable position; misrepresenting, then attacking an opponent's position
distinctive quality of speech or writing created by selection and arrangement of words and figures of speech
in rhetoric, the topic addressed in a piece of writing
created by subordinating conjunction, clause that modifies an independent clause
dependence of one syntactical element on another in a sentence
form of deductive reasoning in which the conclustion is supported by a major and minor premise
sentence structure
combining together two or more elements to produce something more complex

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