Principles of Rhetoric |
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Page 54
... become be- nevolent , self - assured , and generous , the reasons for the events of the story could no longer be said to exist . It is because Hamlet is the kind of person he is that the events of the play develop as they do . Had he ...
... become be- nevolent , self - assured , and generous , the reasons for the events of the story could no longer be said to exist . It is because Hamlet is the kind of person he is that the events of the play develop as they do . Had he ...
Page 138
... becomes a " fascist " ; an " advocate for government support " becomes a " socialist " ; a student demon- stration on behalf of " free speech " on campus becomes " Communist- inspired . " Such use of language to sway an audience is more ...
... becomes a " fascist " ; an " advocate for government support " becomes a " socialist " ; a student demon- stration on behalf of " free speech " on campus becomes " Communist- inspired . " Such use of language to sway an audience is more ...
Page 243
... become incoherent ram- bling ; familiar style can become simplistic and hypocritical ; bal- anced style can become a rhetorical see - saw , stilted and obvious in its effects ; and curt style can become mechanical and devoid of person ...
... become incoherent ram- bling ; familiar style can become simplistic and hypocritical ; bal- anced style can become a rhetorical see - saw , stilted and obvious in its effects ; and curt style can become mechanical and devoid of person ...
Contents
principles of effective organization | 3 |
description | 25 |
narration | 44 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
abstract achieve action American analogy analytic proposition anaphora appeal argument Aristotle audience begin Bruce Catton called cause characters clause clear coherence common conclusion connotative considered contrast create deduction defined definiendum definiens depends describe devices disjunctive syllogism dominant impression emotional essay essential definition evidence example experience explain exposition expression fallacies of definition fallacy following paragraphs genus Gopher Prairie Hamlet hero ideas illustration independent clause induction intended judgment kind language logical loose style major premise material means ment middle term mind motives narrative narrator never novel object organization Paddy Chayevsky particular passage pattern persuasion phrase play plot point of view polysyndeton possible prairie principles probability problem prolepsis proof proposition purpose reader refer result rhetoric rhetoricians sense sentence sequence Shakespeare speaker specific speech stipulated definition story student stylistic suggest syllogism synthetic proposition things tion valid wants Watt governor word writer