Principles of Rhetoric |
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Page 104
... kind of proof will not suit all judgments . We must know what kind of judgment is being advanced , and then make sure that the proof is adequate to supporting the judgment . The modality of a proposition means the urgency with which a ...
... kind of proof will not suit all judgments . We must know what kind of judgment is being advanced , and then make sure that the proof is adequate to supporting the judgment . The modality of a proposition means the urgency with which a ...
Page 164
... kind of life they like to think of themselves as leading : massive , powerful , stylish . Advertisers , public relations men , psychologists , writers — all have be- come very interested in the psychology of " the image " ; all want to ...
... kind of life they like to think of themselves as leading : massive , powerful , stylish . Advertisers , public relations men , psychologists , writers — all have be- come very interested in the psychology of " the image " ; all want to ...
Page 219
... kind of audience to a different kind of response . Thus , there was the rhetoric of the law courts , forensic , which was directed to judicious men and concerned with matters of justice and legality ; the rhetoric of large assemblies ...
... kind of audience to a different kind of response . Thus , there was the rhetoric of the law courts , forensic , which was directed to judicious men and concerned with matters of justice and legality ; the rhetoric of large assemblies ...
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