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5th Six Weeks Quiz Pt. 1
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Rhetoric used to influence an audience by using words and phrases with strong connotations
Loaded Language
Promising more than you can deliver
Bogus Claims
Distortion of someone else's argument to make it easier to attack or refute
Strawman
The repetition of words or phrases to build to a climax or add emphasis
Repetition
Logical fallacy in which one event seems to be the cause of a later event because it occurred earlier
Post Hoc
Appealing to readers’ emotions and feelings
Pathos
Successive words, phrases, clauses expressed with the same or very similar grammatical structure
Parallelism
Seriously Funny
Oxymoron
The assumption that if two things are alike in one regard, they must be alike in other ways
Faulty Analogy
The repetition of words at the end of a line
Epistrophe
Appealing to the audience’s sense of ethical behavior
Ethos
Only two choices are offered when, really, others exist
Either/or Fallacy
An argument that assumes the very thing it is trying to prove is true
Begging the Question
Logical fallacy of claiming that something is true because everyone believes it
Bandwagon
He's in between jobs right now
Euphemism
Draws on the authority of widely respected people, institutions, and texts
Appeals to False Authority
The repetition of words at the beginning of a line is called
Anaphora
When the arguer attacks the person and not the argument
Ad Hominem
I love you more than life itself is an example of
Hyperbole
A brief reference to a famous person or event—often from literature, history, Greek myth, or the Bible is called
Allusion