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AP ENG & COMP TERMS
Rhetorical Terms For AP Test (LANG & LIT)
234
Language - English
10th Grade
04/19/2010

Additional Language - English Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term
Antagonist
Definition
The character who opposes the interests of the protagonist.
Ex: In The Lord of the Rings, Tolkien creates Lord Sauron as the antagonist to Frodo.
Term
Antanaclasis
Definition
Repetition of a word in two different senses.
Ex: If we do not hang together, we will hang separately.
Term
Anticipated Objection
Definition
The technique a writer or speaker uses in an argumentative text to address and answer objections, even though the audience has not had the opportunity to voice these objections.
Ex: "You ask, what is our policy? I say it is to wage war by land, sea, and air…You ask, what is our aim? I can answer in one word. It is victory." (Winston Churchill)
Term
Antimetabole
Definition
The repetition of words in successive clauses in reverse grammatical order.
Ex: One should eat to live, not live to eat.
Term
Apologist
Definition
A person or character who makes a case for some controversial, even contentious, position.
Ex: In Romeo and Juliet, by William Shakespeare, Romeo makes a case for marrying Juliet, despite the controversy over the issue.
Term
Apology
Definition
An elaborate statement justifying some controversial, even contentious, position.
Ex: "I have a dream that one day this nation will rise up and live out the true meaning of its creed: 'We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal.'" (Martin Luther King Jr.)
Term
Apostrophe
Definition
The direct address of an absent person or personified object as if he/she/it is able to reply.
Ex: "O' Romeo, Romeo! Wherefore art thou Romeo?" (William Shakespeare)
Term
Appeal to Authority
Definition
In a text, the reference to words, action, or beliefs of a person in authority as a means of supporting a claim, generalization, or conclusion.
Ex: Isaac Newton was a genius and he believed in God. Therefore, God must exist.
Term
Appeal to Emotion
Definition
The appeal of a text to the feelings or interests of the audience.
Ex: If you don't graduate from high school, you will always be poor.
Term
Argument by Analysis
Definition
An argument developed by breaking the subject matter into its component parts.
Ex: The Virginians failed miserably at initial colonization and suffered through disease, war, and famine because of their high expectations and greed, which also molded their colony socially and economically.
Term
Asyndenton
Definition
The omission of conjunctions between related clauses.
Ex: "This is the villain among you who deceived you, who cheated you, who meant to betray you completely." (Aristotle)
Term
Basic Topic
Definition
One of the four perspectives that Aristotle explained could be used to generate material about any subject matter: greater or less, possible and impossible, past fact, and future fact.
Ex: Topics include justice, peace, rights, and movie theaters.
Term
Brain Storming
Definition
Within the planning act of the writing process, a technique used by a writer or speaker to generate many ideas, some of which he or she will later eliminate.
Ex: I brainstorm before history essays by writing down as many specific Exs as I can think of for the prompt.
Term
Cloze Test
Definition
A test of reading ability that requires a person to fill in missing words in a text.
Ex: The SAT's language portion contains questions modeled in this way.
Term
Common Topic
Definition
One of the perspectives, derived from Aristotle's topics, used to generate material. The six common topics are definition, division, comparison, relation, circumstances, and testimony.
Ex: Alexander Hamilton and Thomas Jefferson's political opinions can be the subject of a common topic, such as division.
Term
Compound Subject
Definition
A sentence in which two or more nouns, noun phrases, or noun clauses constitute the grammatical subject of a clause
Ex: The dog and the cat scurried away from the approaching car.
Term
Confirmation
Definition
In ancient Roman oratory, the part of a speech in which the speaker or writer could offer proof or demonstration of the central idea.
Ex: In Julius Caesar's speech, the confirmation was scattered throughout.
Term
Conflict
Definition
The struggle of characters with themselves, with others, or with the world around them.
Ex: In The Grapes of Wrath, migrants conflict with property owners.
Term
Connotation
Definition
The implied meaning of a word, in contrast to its directly expressed "dictionary meaning."
Ex: Home literally means one's house, but implies feelings of family and security.
Term
Consulting
Definition
Seeking help for one's writing from a reader.
Ex: I often consult my parents.
Term
Dramatistic Pentad
Definition
The invention strategy, developed by Kenneth Burke, that invites a speaker or writer to create identities for the act, agent, agency, attitude, scene, and purpose in a situation.
Term
Effect
Definition
The emotional or psychological impact a text has on a reader or listener.
Ex: The Grapes Of Wrath, by John Steinbeck, causes the reader to have sympathy for migrant workers.
Term
Ellipsis
Definition
The omission of words, the meaning of which is provided by the overall context of a passage.
Ex: "Medical thinking . . . stressed air as the communicator of disease, ignoring sanitation or visible carriers" (Tuchman).
Term
Epanalepsis
Definition
 Repetition at the end of a clause of the word that occurred at the beginning of the clause.
Ex: Blood hath brought blood.
Term
Epithet
Definition
A word of phrase adding a characteristic to a person's name.
Ex: Alexander the Great.
Term
Figurative Language
Definition
Language dominated by the use of schemes and tropes.
Ex: "The ground is thirsty and hungry."
Term
Flashback
Definition
A part of the plot that moves back in time and then returns to the present.
Ex: In Oedipus Rex, both Oedipus and Iocaste recall previous events.
Term
Generalization
Definition
A point that a speaker or writer generations on the basis of considering a number of particular examples.
Ex: "All French people are rude."
Term
Genre
Definition
A piece of writing classified by type.
Ex: Science Fiction.
Term
Investigating
Definition
Activities that writers use, during the writing process, to locate ideas and information.
Ex: For my research paper, I have investigated many sources in the library and online.
Term
Irony
Definition
Writing or speaking that implies the contrary of what is actually written or spoken.
Ex 1: "Of course I believe you," Joe said sarcastically.
Ex 2: "I can't describe to you how surprised I was to find out I loved her…I even hoped for a while that she'd throw me over" (Fitzgerald 157).
Term
Narration
Definition
In ancient Roman oratory, the part of a speech in which the speaker provided background information on the topic.
Ex: Julius Caesar used narration in many of his speeches.
Term
Pace
Definition
The speed with which a plot moves from one event to another.
Example: In The Grapes of Wrath, John Steinbeck paces the story somewhat slowly, interspersing it with main-idea chapters.
Term
Paralellism
Definition
A set of similarly structured words, phrases, or clauses that appears in a sentence or paragraph.
Ex 1: The dog ran, stumbled, and fell.
Ex 2: "After two years I remember the rest of that day, and that night and the next day…" (Fitzgerald 17).
Term
Paranthesis
Definition
An insertion of material that interrupts the typical flow of a sentence.
Ex: The dog (which was black) ran, stumbled, and fell.
Term
People's Topics
Definition
The English translation of konnoi topoi, the four topics that Aristotle explained could be used to generate material about any subject matter; also called basic topics.
Ex: Topics include justice, peace, rights, and movie theaters.
Term
Periodic Sentence
Definition
A sentence with modifying elements included before the verb and/or complement.
Ex: "John, the tough one, the sullen kid who scoffed at any show of sentiment, gave his mother flowers."
Term
Scheme
Definition
An artful variation from typical formation and arrangement of words or sentences.
Ex: Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers.
Term
Act
Definition
 In a dramatistic pentad created by a speaker or writer in order to invent material, the words the speaker or writer uses to describe what happened or happens in a particular situation.
Ex: "With the cunning typical of its breed, the automobile never breaks down while entering a filling station with a large staff of idle mechanics.  It waits…" (Russell Baker)
Term
Agency
Definition
 In a dramatistic pentad created by a speaker or writer in order to invent material, the words the speaker or writer uses to describe the means by which something happened or happens in a particular situation.
Ex: "As a general rule, any object capable of breaking down at the moment when it is most needed will do so.  The automobile is typical of the category." (Russell Baker)
Term
Agent
Definition
In a dramatistic pentad created by a speaker or writer in order to invent material, the words the speaker uses to describe the person or persons involved in taking action in a particular situation.
Ex: "Thus [the automobile] creates maximum misery, inconvenience, frustration, and irritability among its human cargo, thereby reducing its owner's life span." (Russell Baker)
Term
Anecdote
Definition
 A brief narrative offered in a text to capture the audience's attention or to support a generalization of claim.
Ex: "A good man, gray on the edges, an assistant manager in a brown starched and ironed uniform, is washing the glass windows of the store...Good night, m'ijo! he tells a young boy coming out after playing the video game..." (Dagoberto Gilb)
Term
Compound Sentence
Definition
A sentence with two or more independent clauses.
Ex: Canada is a rich country, but it still has many poor people.
Term
Conclusion (of Syllogism)
Definition
 The ultimate point or generalization that a syllogism expresses.
Ex: All mortals die.  All men are mortals.  All men die.
Term
Contraction
Definition
 The combination of two words into one by eliminating one or more sounds and indicating the omission with an apostrophe.
Ex: "Do not" becomes "don't." "Should have" becomes "should've."
Term
Contraries
Definition
See contradiction.
Ex: The book is red. The book is not green. If the book is read, then the book is not green. If the book is not red, then the book may be green.
Term
Data (as Evidence)
Definition
Facts, statistics, and examples that a speaker or writer offers in support of a claim, generalization, or conclusion.
Ex: Conserve electricity.  42% of America's carbon dioxide emissions come from electricity generation.
Term
Deductive Reasoning
Definition
 Reasoning that begins with a general principle and concludes with a specific instance that demonstrates the general principle.
Ex: "Gravity makes things fall. The apple that hit my head was due to gravity."
Term
Delivery
Definition
The presentation and format of a composition.
Ex: The Grapes of Wrath, by John Steinbeck, is formatted by chapters, which either present general information about farmers or the specific story of Joe and his family.
Term
Editing
Definition
The final observation, before delivery, by a writer or speaker of a composition to evaluate appropriateness and to locate missteps in the work.
Ex: For process papers, I edit my work many times before submitting a final draft.
Term
Efferent Reading
Definition
 Reading to garner information from a text.
Ex: For history, I perform efferent reading of the textbook.
Term
Enthymeme
Definition
 Logical reasoning with one premise left unstated.
Ex: We cannot trust this man, for he has perjured himself in the past. (Missing: Those who perjure themselves cannot be trusted.)
Term
Euphemism
Definition
 An indirect expression of unpleasant information in such way as to lesson its impact.
Ex 1: "Passed way" for "died."
Ex 2: "You see, I carry on a little business on the side, a sort of a sideline, you understand"(Fitzgerald 87).
Term
Image
Definition
 A passage of text that evokes sensation or emotional intensity.
Ex: "Waves crashing on the ocean look like knives."
Term
Inference
Definition
A conclusion that a reader or listener reaches by means of his or her own thinking rather than by being told directly by a text.
Ex: I infer that America became isolationist during the 1920s because of the horrors of World War I.
Term
Memory
Definition
Access to information and collective information.
Ex: I will use my memory to remember these terms
Term
Narrative Intrusion
Definition
A comment that is made directly to the reader by breaking into the forward plot movement.
Ex: Narrator: The dog ran very fast across the street, dodging two cars.
Term
Point of View
Definition
 The perspective or source of a piece of writing. A first-person point of view has a narrator or speaker who refers to himself or herself as "I." A third-person point of view lacks "I" in perspective.
Ex: The Great Gatsby is written in first-person point of view.
Term
Ratio
Definition
Combination of two or more elements in a dramatistic pentad in order to invent material.
Term
Reading
Definition
The construction of meaning, purpose, and effect in a text.
Ex: I am reading The Great Gatsby.
Term
Reading Journal
Definition
A log in which readers can trace developing reactions to what they are reading.
Ex: I am maintaining a character log while reading The Great Gatsby.
Term
Rhetorical Choices
Definition
The particular choices a writer or speaker makes to achieve meaning, purpose, or effect.
Ex: F. Scott Fitzgerald in The Great Gatsby chooses to use imagery, similes, and metaphors often.
Term
Stock Settings
Definition
Stereotypical time and place settings that let readers know a text's genre immediately.
Ex: For science fiction, if the text takes place in the future, on another planet, or in another universe.
Term
Alliteration
Definition
 The repetition of consonant sounds at the beginning or in the middle of two or more adjacent words.
Ex: "To make a man to meet the moral need/ A man to match the mountains and the sea" (Edwin Markham)
Term
Anadiplosis
Definition
The repetition of the last word of one clause at the beginning of the following clause.
Ex: "Men in great place are thrice servants: servants of the sovereign or state; servants of fame; and servants of business." (Francis Bacon)
Term
Anaphora
Definition
The repetition of a group of words at the beginning of successive clauses. Ex: "We shall not flag or fail. We shall go on to the end. We shall fight in France, we shall fight on the seas and oceans, we shall fight with growing confidence…" (Winston Churchill)
Term
Antecedent- Consequence Relationship
Definition
 The relationship expressed by "if…then" reasoning.
Ex: If industries poison rivers with pollutants, then many fish will die.
Term
Anthimeria
Definition
The substitution of one part of speech for another.
Ex: "The thunder would not peace at my bidding." (William Shakespeare)
Term
Appeal
Definition
One of three strategies for persuading audiences--logos, appeal to reason; pathos, appeal to emotion; and ethos, appeal to ethics.
Ex: "I elicited the anger of some of the most aggressive teenagers in my high school.  A couple of nights later, a car pulled up in front of my house, and the angry teenagers in the car dumped garbage on the lawn of my house as an act of revenge and intimidation." (James Garbarino)
Term
Appositive
Definition
A noun or noun phrase that follows another noun immediately or defines or amplifies its meaning.
Ex: Orion, my orange cat, is sitting on the couch.
Term
Argument
Definition
A carefully constructed, well-supported representation of how a writer sees an issue, problem, or subject.
Ex: The Patriots prevailed over the Loyalists, who they violently persecuted due to their conflicting position; both betrayed the African slaves to temporarily bolster their military.
Term
Aristotelian Triangle
Definition
A diagram showing the relations of writer or speaker, audience (reader or listener), and text in a rhetorical situation.
Term
Canon
Definition
One of the traditional elements of rhetorical composition -- invention, arrangement, style, memory, or delivery.
Ex: Frederick Douglass's style (one aspect of canon) is both objective and subjective.
Term
Casuistry
Definition
A mental exercise to discover possibilities for analysis of communication.
Term
Dramatic Narration
Definition
A narrative in which the reader or viewer does not have access to the unspoken thoughts of any character.
Term
Dynamic Character
Definition
One who changes during the course of the narrative.
Ex: Romeo is a dramatic character in Romeo and Juliet, by William Shakespeare.
Term
Evidence
Definition
 The facts, statistics, anecdotes, and examples that  a speaker or writer offers in support of a claim, generalization, or conclusion.
Ex: "Recent studies in the brain chemistry of rats show that when they play, their brains release large amounts of dopamine . . ." (Rifkin).
Term
Metonymy
Definition
 An entity referred to by one of its attributes or associations.
Ex: "The press" for the news media.
Term
Symbol
Definition
In a text, an element that stands for more than itself and, therefore, helps to convey a theme of the text.
Ex: Purple symbolizes royalty.
Term
Tautology
Definition
A group of words that merely repeats the meaning already conveyed.
Ex: "If you don't get any better, then you'll never improve."
Term
Thesis
Definition
The main idea in a text, often the main generalization, conclusion, or claim.
Ex: The corruption of America's rich in The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald.
Term
Thesis Statement
Definition
A single sentence that states a text's thesis, usually somewhere near the beginning.
Ex: "Sweatt v. Painter advanced equality by ultimately improving African American educational rights, thus transforming American democracy for a better today."
Term
Topic
Definition
A place where writers go to discover methods for proof and strategies for presentation of ideas.
Ex: Gun control laws, the environment, or communism.
Term
Trope
Definition
An artful variation from expected modes of expression of thoughts and ideas.
Ex: Pun or metonymy.
Term
Voice
Definition
The textual features, such as diction and sentence structure, that convey a writer's or speaker's persona.
Ex: F. Scott Fitzgerald's voice is made up of mystery.
Term
Writing Process
Definition
 The acts a writer goes through, often recursively, to complete a piece of writing: inventing, investigating, planning, drafting, consulting, revising, and editing.
Ex: I used this to write my research paper.
Term
Audience
Definition
The person or persons who listen to a spoken text or read a written one and are capable of responding to it.
Ex: The audience of Michael Chabon's lecture at the Mondavi Center was composed of many Oak Ridge students.
Term
Chiasmus
Definition
Inverted relationship between two elements in two parallel phrases.
Ex: "To stop too fearful and too faint to go."
Term
Claim
Definition
 The ultimate conclusion, generalization, or point that a syllogism or enthymeme expresses.  The point, backed up by support, of an argument.
Ex: In The Grapes of Wrath, John Steinbeck's claim was that the poor are wrongly mistreated.
Term
Climax
Definition
The arrangement of words, phrases, or clauses in order of increasing number or importance.
Ex: "He risked truth, he risked honor, he risked fame, he risked all that men hold dear,—yea, he risked life itself..."
Term
Climbing the Ladder
Definition
 A term referring to the scheme of climax.
Ex: See climax.
Term
Isocolon
Definition
Parallel elements that are similar in structure and in length.
Ex: "… to impress the ignorant, to perplex the dubious, and to confound the scrupulous …"
Term
Mnemonic Device
Definition
A systematic aid to memory.
Ex: "Roy G. Biv" for the most common colors
Term
Onomatopoeia
Definition
A literary device in which the sound of a word is related to its meaning.
Ex: Words like "bang," and "click".
Term
Revising
Definition
Returning to a draft to rethink, reread, and rework ideas and sentences.
Ex: I am currently revising my research paper.
Term
Scene
Definition
In a dramatistic pentad created by a speaker or writer in order to invent material, the words the speaker or writer uses to describe where and when something happened or happens in a particular situation.
Ex: "My family have been prominent, well-to-do people in this Middle Western city for three generations" (Fitzgerald 2).
Term
Simple Sentence
Definition
A sentence with one independent clause and no dependent clause.
Ex: The dog ran.
Term
Situation
Definition
 The convergence in a situation of exigency (the need to write), audience, and purpose.
Ex: Before drafting my research paper, I had to analyze my purpose and how much background information to provide for my audience.
Term
Allegory
Definition
An extended metaphor.
Ex 1: "During the time I have voyaged on this ship, I have avoided the cabin; rather, I have remained on deck, battered by wind and rain, but able to see moonlight…"
Ex 2: "This is a valley of ashes--a fantastic farm where ashes grow like wheat into ridges and hills and grotesque gardens, where ashes take forms of houses and...of men..." (Fitzgerald 27).
Term
Allusion
Definition
A reference in a written or spoken text to another text or to some particular body of knowledge.
Ex 1: "I doubt if Phaethon feared more -- that time/ he dropped the sun-reins of his father's chariot/ and burned the streak of sky we see today" (Dante's Inferno).
Ex 2: "Have you read 'The rise of the Coloured Empires' by this man Goddard?" (Fitzgerald 17).
Term
Anastrophe
Definition
 Inversion or reversal of the usual order of words.
Ex: Echoed the hills.
Term
Anthimeria
Definition
 The substitution of one part of speech for another.
Ex: The thunder would not peace at my bidding.
Term
Antithesis
Definition
The juxtaposition of contrasting words or ideas, often in parallel structure.
Ex 1: "Extremism in defense of liberty is no vice, moderation in the pursuit of justice is no virtue." (Barry Goldwater)
Ex 2: "…found her lying on her bed as lovely as the June night in her flowered dress--and as drunk as a monkey" (Fitzgerald 81).
Term
Flat Character
Definition
A figure readily identifiable by memorable traits but not fully developed.
Ex: Mr. Collins in Pride and Prejudice, by Jane Austen.
Term
Format
Definition
The structural elements that constitute the presentation of a written text.
Ex: The Modern Language Association (MLA) has created a format for research papers.
Term
Freewriting
Definition
Intuitive writing strategy for generation of ideas by writing without stopping.
Ex: In English 1, I performed freewriting for two short pieces.
Term
Functional Part
Definition
 A part of a text classified according to its function.
Ex: The introduction.
Term
Hyperbole
Definition
 An exaggeration for effect.
Ex 1: "I told you a billion times not to exaggerate."
Ex 2: "…we scattered light through half Astoria…" (Fitzgerald 72).
Term
Invention
Definition
The art of generating material for a text; the first of the five traditional canons of rhetoric.
Ex: I use brainstorming before an essay as invention.
Term
Journal
Definition
A text in which writers produce informal compositions that help them "think on paper" about topics and writing projects.
Ex: I had a journal last year for Honors English in which I recorded my thoughts on various novels I read.
Term
Journaling
Definition
 The process of writing in a journal.
Ex: I wrote a journal last year for Honors English on the books I read.
Term
Loose Sentence
Definition
A sentence that adds modifying elements after the subject, verb, and complement.
Ex: "Bells rang, filling the air with their clangor, startling pigeons into flight from every belfry, bringing people into the streets to hear the news."
Term
Meiosis
Definition
Representation of a thing as less than it really is to compel greater esteem for it.
Ex: Calling an act of arson a prank.
Term
Metaphor
Definition
An implied comparison that does not use the word like or as.
Ex: "No man is an island" (Donne).
Term
Oxymoron
Definition
Juxtaposed words with seemingly contradictory meanings.
Ex: "O miserable abundance! O beggarly riches!" (Donne).
Term
Paralipsis
Definition
Irony in which one proposes to pass over a matter, but subtly reveals it.
Ex: "She is talented, not to mention rich."
Term
Peroration
Definition
In ancient Roman oratory, the part of a speech in which the speaker would draw together the entire argument and include material designed to compel the audience to think or act in a way consonant with the central argument.
Ex: In Julius Caesar's speech, the peroration came at the end.
Term
Protagonist
Definition
The major character in a piece of literature; the figure in the narrative whose interests the reader is most concerned about and sympathetic toward.
Ex: Tom Joad in The Grapes of Wrath
Term
Repretoire
Definition
A set of assumptions, skills, facts, and experience that a reader brings to a text to make meaning.
Term
Setting
Definition
 The context--including time and place--of a narrative.
Ex: The area surround New York City in the 1920s is the setting of The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald.
Term
Sharing
Definition
A system calling for writers to read or listen to one another's work and suggest ways to improve it.
Ex: In AP US History, we peer reviewed each other's take-home DBQs.
Term
Similie
Definition
A type of comparison that uses the word like or as.
Ex: "There was something gorgeous about him, some heightened sensitivity to the promises of life, as if he were related to one of those intricate machines that register earthquakes ten thousand miles away" (Fitzgerald 2).
Term
Syllogism
Definition
Logical reasoning from inarguable premises.
Ex: All mortals die. All humans are mortal. All humans die.
Term
Synecdoche
Definition
A part of something used to refer to the whole.
Ex: "The hired hands are not doing their jobs."
Term
Syntax
Definition
The order of words in a sentence.
Ex: "The dog ran" not "The ran dog."
Term
Theme
Definition
The message conveyed by a literary work.
Ex: The decline of the American dream in The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald.
Term
Tone
Definition
The writer's or speaker's attitude toward the subject matter.
Ex: Light-hearted in the Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay by Michael Chabon.
Term
Understatement
Definition
Deliberate playing down of a situation in order to make a point.
Ex: "I think there's a problem between Shias and Sunnis."
Term
Unity
Definition
The sense that a text is, appropriately, about only one subject and achieves one major purpose or effect.
Ex: Pride by Dagoberto Gilb
Term
Unreliable Narrator
Definition
An untrustworthy or naïve commentator on events and characters in a story.
Ex: The people at Gatsby's parties like Jordan who spread rumors about Gatsby's past in The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald.
Term
Versimilitude
Definition
 The quality of a text that reflects the truth of actual experience.
Ex: The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay by Michael Chabon has medium verisimilitude.
Term
Zeugma
Definition
A trope in which one word, usually a noun or the main verb, governs two other words not related in meaning.
Ex: He governs his will and his kingdom.
Term
Aesthetic Reading
Definition
Reading to experience the world of the text.
Ex: One often reads John Steinbeck's novels, like The Grapes of Wrath, to experience his detailed settings.
Term
Aim
Definition
The goal a writer or speaker hopes to achieve with the text -- for example, to clarify difficult material, to inform, to convince, to persuade.  Also called intention and purpose.
Ex: In Pride, Dagoberto Gilb's aim is to define pride and what it means to him.
Term
Anglo-Saxon Diction
Definition
Word choice characterized by simple, often one- or two- syllable nouns, adjectives, and adverbs.
Ex: Words include "thinking," "kingly," "bridge," "stone," and "early."
Term
Apposition
Definition
Two nouns that are adjacent to each other and reference the same thing.
Ex: I know the dog Toto.
Term
Arrangement
Definition
In a spoken or written text, the placement of ideas for effect.
Ex: In essays, writers often strategically arrange their essays into paragraphs and order their points from most convincing to least.
Term
Assonance
Definition
The repetition of vowel sounds in the stressed syllables of two or more adjacent words.
Ex: "Or sinking as the light wind lives or dies" (John Keats)
Term
Assumption
Definition
An opinion, a perspective, or a belief that a writer or speaker thinks the audience holds.
Ex: "We think a problem is weakness, mental laziness, intellectual inflation, but an issue is deep-rooted, interior, and personal." (Allison Amend)
Term
Attitude
Definition
In an adapted dramatistic pentad created by a speaker or writer in order to invent materials, the manner in which an action is carried out.
Ex: "Truth be told, we have replaced problem with issue in our vocabulary.  And issue is a euphemism." (Allison Amend)
Term
Auxesis
Definition
Magnifying the importance or gravity of something by referring it with a disproportionate name.
Ex: Calling a scratch on an arm a wound.
Term
Begging of the Question
Definition
The situation that results when a writer or speaker constructs an argument on an assumption that the audience does not accept.
Ex: This painting is horrible because it is obviously worthless.
Term
Casual Relationship
Definition
The relationship expressing, "If X is the cause, then Y is the effect," or, "If Y is the effect, then X caused it."
Ex: If the dog runs away, then the boy will be sad.
Term
Character
Definition
 A personage in a narrative.
Ex: Romeo was a character in Romeo and Juliet, by William Shakespeare.
Term
Complex Sentence
Definition
A sentence with one independent clause and one or more dependent clauses.
Ex: As long as it isn't cold, it doesn't matter if it rains.
Term
Compound- Complex Sentence
Definition
A sentence with two or more independent clauses and one or more dependent clauses.
Ex: The package arrived in the morning, but the courier left before I could check the contents.
Term
Context
Definition
The convergence of time, place, audience, and motivating factors in which a piece of writing or a speech is situated.
Ex: Kate Chopin lived in the late 1800s in Southern America as a feminist.  This background formed the foundation of The Awakening.
Term
Contradiction
Definition
One of the types of rhetorical invention included under the common topic of relationships.  Contradiction urges the speaker or writer to invent an example or a proof that is counter to the main idea or argument.
Ex: "If war is the cause of our misery, peace is the way to promote our happiness."
Term
Denotation
Definition
The "dictionary definition" of a word, in contrast to its connotation, or implied meaning.
Ex: A house is literally a dwelling usually for a family.
Term
Descriptive Writing
Definition
Writing that relies on sensory images to characterize a person or place.
Ex: "so much depends/ upon/ the red wheel/ barrow/ glazed with rain/ water/ beside the white/ chickens" (William Carlos Williams)
Term
Dialect
Definition
The describable patterns of language--grammar and vocabulary--used by a particular cultural or ethnic population.
Ex: A Caribbean dialect is often "sing-songish" and leaves out words from sentences.
Term
Dialogue
Definition

Conversation between and among characters.
Ex: "Jim, I don't get it," Blair said.

Jim raised an eyebrow. "Don't get what?"

Term
Diction
Definition
Word choice, which is viewed on scales of formality/informality, concreteness/abstraction, Latinate derivation/Anglo-Saxon derivation, and denotative value/connotative value.
Ex: Using "issue" instead of "problem."
Term
Double Entendre
Definition
The double meanings of a group of words that the speaker or writer has purposely left ambiguous.
Ex 1: "My name is Ozymandias, king of kings: Look on my works, ye mighty, and despair!" (Shelley).
Ex 2: "West Egg especially still figures into my more fantastic dreams" (Fitzgerald 185).
Term
Drafting
Definition
The process by which writers get something written on paper or in a computer file so that they can develop their ideas and begin moving toward an end, a start-to-finish product; the raw material for what will become the final product.
Ex: For the research paper, we will have to revise and draft many times to perfect our papers.
Term
Dramatic Monologue
Definition
A type of poem, popular primarily in the nineteenth century, in which the speaker is delivering a monologue to an assumed group of listeners.
Ex: In "My Last Duchess," by Robert Browning, shows off a painting of his late wife and reveals his cruelty to her.
Term
Epistrophe
Definition
The repetition of a group of words at the end of successive clauses.
Ex: "What lies behind us and what lies before us are tiny compared to what lies within us" (Emerson).
Term
Erotema
Definition
Asking a question to assert or deny something obliquely not for an answer.
Ex: "How much longer must our people endure this injustice?"
Term
Ethos
Definition
The appeal of a text to the credibility and character of the speaker, writer, or narrator.
Ex: If you don't graduate from high school, you will always be poor.
Term
Exaggeration
Definition
An overstatement.
Ex: The Matrix is the best movie ever made.
Term
Example
Definition
An anecdote or a narrative offered in support of a generalization, claim, or point.
Ex: Animals have more intelligence than imagined. "On human IQ tests, she [a gorilla named Koko] scores between 70 and 95" (Rifkin).
Term
Exordium
Definition
In ancient roman oratory, the introduction of a speech; literally, the "web" meant to draw the audience in the speech.
Ex: Julius Caesar's speech begins with an exordium.
Term
Extended Analogy
Definition
An extended passage arguing that if two things are similar in one or two ways, they are probably similar in other ways as well.
Ex: In "Grant and Lee: A Study in Contrasts," Catton argues some similarities between Grant and Lee.
Term
Extended Example
Definition
An example that is carried through several sentences or paragraphs.
Ex: In "Pride," Dagoberto Gilb extends an Ex of pride in the form of an anecdote through two paragraphs.
Term
Fable
Definition
A narrative in which fictional characters, often animals, take actions that have ethical or moral significance.
Ex: Animal Farm, written by George Orwell, is a fable.
Term
Figures of Rhetoric
Definition
Schemes--that is, variations from typical word or sentence formation--and tropes, which are variations from typical patterns of thought.
Ex: "When I first saw her, my soul began to quiver."
Term
Flashforward
Definition
A part of the plot that jumps ahead in time and returns to the present.
Ex: Oedipus is told he will sleep with his mother and kill his father by a prophet.
Term
Heuristic
Definition
A systematic strategy or method for solving problems.
Ex: Lawrence Lessig has argued that patents in different industries should be given different amounts of time, using this strategy.
Term
House Analogy
Definition
In ancient Roman oratory, the method that speakers used to memorize their speeches, connecting the introduction to the porch of a house, the narration and partition to the front foyer, the confirmation and refutation to rooms connected to the foyer, and the conclusion to the back door.
Ex: Julius Caesar most likely used this method to memorize his speeches.
Term
Hyperbaton
Definition
Unusual or inverted word order.
Ex: "Size matters not. Judge me by my size, do you?" (Yoda).
Term
Imagery
Definition
Language that evokes particular sensations or emotionally rich experiences in a reader.
Ex 1: Edgar Allan Poe uses imagery in The Fall of the House of the Usher.
Ex 2: "…ran for a huge black knotted trees whose massed leaves made a fabric against the rain…" (Fitzgerald 93).
Term
Implied Metaphor
Definition
A metaphor embedded in a sentence rather than expressed directly as a sentence.
Ex 1: "John swelled and rustled his plumage." (John was a peacock.)
Ex 2: "Something was making him nibble at the edge of stale ideas as if his sturdy physical egotism no longer nourished his peremptory heart" (Fitzgerald 25).
Term
Inductive Reasoning
Definition
Reasoning the begins by citing a number of specific instances or examples and then shows how collectively they constitute a general principle.
Ex: This ice is cold. Thus, all ice is cold
Term
Intention
Definition
The goal a writer or speaker hopes to achieve with the text.
Ex: One of John Steinbeck's intentions in The Grapes of Wrath was to end humans' inhumanity to fellow humans.
Term
Jargon
Definition
The specialized vocabulary of a particular group.
Ex: Bilateral periorbital hematoma (a black eye).
Term
Konnoi Topoi
Definition
People's topics; ordinary patterns of reasoning; also called basic topics.
Ex: Topics include justice, peace, rights, and movie theaters.
Term
Latinate Diction
Definition
Vocabulary characterized by the choice of elaborate, often complicated words from Latin roots.
Ex: Words like "deviate," "aqueduct," and "insulate".
Term
Limited Narration
Definition
A narrative in which the reader or viewer has access to the unspoken thoughts of one character or partial thinking of more than one character.
Ex: "Murgatroyd met Madeline on New Year's Eve in 2002. He attended a party and she opened the door. Her hair! Only a goddess could have hair so fine."
Term
Litotes
Definition
Understatement.
Ex 1: "This is no ordinary city" rather than "this is an impressive city".
Ex 2: "I lived at West Egg, the--well, the less fashionable of the two, though this is a most superficial tag…" (Fitzgerald 9).
Term
Logic
Definition
The art of reasoning.
Ex: All humans are mortal. Socrates is human. Thus, Socrates is mortal.
Term
Logos
Definition
The appeal of a text based on the logical structure of its argument or central ideas.
Ex: "If there really were such strong evidence of racial bias in the justice system it would be newsworthy. . ." (Taylor 6).
Term
Mood
Definition
The feeling that a text is intended to produce in the audience.
Ex: In John Steinbeck's The Grapes of Wrath, the mood is mostly dark and gloomy.
Term
Narrative
Definition
An anecdote or a story offered in support of a generalization, claim, or point. Also, a function in texts accomplished when the speaker or writer tells a story.
Ex: "A good man, gray on the edges, an assistant manager in a brown starched and ironed uniform, is washing the glass windows of the store...Good night, m'ijo! he tells a young boy coming out after playing the video game..." (Dagoberto Gilb)
Term
Omniscient Narration
Definition
A narrative in which the reader or viewer has access to the unspoken thoughts of all the characters.
Ex: Our Town by Thornton Wilder.
Term
Parable
Definition
A usually short fictitious story that illustrates a moral attitude or a religious principle.
Ex: Ignacy Krasicki's "The Blind Man and the Lame."
Term
Paradox
Definition
 A statement that seems untrue on the surface but is true nevertheless.
Ex: "Not having a fashion is a fashion."
Term
Paronomasia
Definition
To call with a slight change of name; a play on words.
Ex: "Independence is what a boy wants from his father when he wants to be let a loan."
Term
Partition
Definition
In ancient Roman oratory, the part of a speech where the speaker would divide the main topic into parts.
Ex: Julius Caesar used partitions to better communicate his argument.
Term
Pathos
Definition
 The appeal of a text to the emotions or interests of the audience.
Ex: ". . . Helped feed a wave of national breast-beating over the unfairness of the juvenile justice system" (Taylor 1).
Term
Peer Review
Definition
A system calling for writers to read or listen to one another's work and suggest ways to improve it.
Ex: In AP US History, we peer reviewed each other's take-home DBQs.
Term
Pentad
Definition
Kenneth Burke's system for analyzing motives and actions in communication. The five points of the pentad are act, agent, agency, scene, and purpose.
Term
Periphrasis
Definition
The substitution of an attributive word or phrase for a proper name, or the use of a proper name to suggest a personality characteristic.
Ex 1: "He was no Romeo; but then again, she was no Juliet."
Ex 2: "…I stared at it, like Kant at his church steeple…" (Fitzgerald 93).
Term
Persona
Definition
The character that a writer or speaker conveys to the audience; the plural is personae.
Ex: In The Great Gatsby, Nick Carraway is a persona.
Term
Personae
Definition
The plural of persona.
Ex: Nick Carraway and Jay Gatsby.
Term
Personification
Definition
The giving of human characteristics to inanimate objects.
Ex: The fall season has been personified as "sitting on a granary floor" (Keats).
Term
Persuasion
Definition
 The changing of people's minds or actions by language.
Ex: Protect the environment, for it is what the lives of your children and the future of the world will depend on.
Term
Pretitio Principi
Definition
Begging of the question; disagreeing with premises or reasoning.
Ex: "The bible says god exists and the bible must be right since it is the revealed word of god, so god exists."
Term
Planning
Definition
Determining appropriateness of information for audience and for purpose.
Ex: I am in the planning and drafting stages of my research paper.
Term
Plot
Definition
Arrangement of events in a story.
Ex: In The Grapes of Wrath, Joe and his family meet up, go to California, search for jobs, and live in various camps. In the end, the only benefit the gain is unity.
Term
Plot Devices
Definition
Elements of plot that operate to cause or resolve conflicts and to provide information.
Ex: Foreshadowing.
Term
Poem
Definition
Louise Rosenblatt's term for the interpretive moment when reader and text connect.
Ex: In The Grapes of Wrath, this occurs when Steinbeck first describes the surrounding setting with figurative language.
Term
Polyptoton
Definition
Repetition of words derived from the same root.
Ex: Repeating words like "strong," "skillful," and "strength."
Term
Polysyndenton
Definition
Repetition of conjunctions in close succession.
Ex: "We have ships and men and money and stores."
Term
Premise - Major
Definition
The first premise in a syllogism. The major premise states an irrefutable generalization.
Ex: All men are mortal.
Term
Premise - Minor
Definition
The second premise in a syllogism. The minor premise offers a particular instance of generalization stated in the major premise.
Ex: Some philosophers are men.
Term
Prosopopoeia
Definition
The giving of human characteristics to inanimate objects.
Ex: The window winked at me.
Term
Pun
Definition
A play on words. Types of puns include anataclasis, words that sound alike but have different meanings; paranomasia, words alike in sound but different in meaning; and syllepsis, a word used differently in relation to two other words it governs or modifies.
Ex: "I moss say I'm taking a lichen to that fungi."
Term
Purpose
Definition
The goal a writer or speaker hopes to achieve with the text. Also called aim and intention. In a dramatistic pentad created by a speaker or writer in order in invent material, the words the speaker or writer uses to describe the reason something happened or happens in a particular situation.
Ex: In Pride, Dagoberto Gilb's aim is to define pride and what it means to him.
Term
Reader's Repertoire
Definition
 The collection of predictions and revisions a person employs when reading a text.
Term
Recursive
Definition
Referring to the moving back and forth from invention to revision in the process of writing.
Ex: In writing my research paper, I invent material and revise previously invented material.
Term
Refutation
Definition
In ancient Roman oratory, the part of a speech in which the speaker would anticipate objections to the points being raised and counter them.
Ex: Julius Caesar used this method in his speeches to better argue his point.
Term
Reliable Narrator
Definition
A believable, trustworthy commentator on events and characters in a story.
Ex: In The Great Gatsby, Nick Carraway is a reliable narrator, though somewhat secretive.
Term
Repetition
Definition
In a text, repeated use of sounds, words, phrases, or clauses to emphasize meaning or achieve effect.
Ex 1: The dog ran, the dog jumped, and the dog whimpered.
Ex 2:"'Hot!' said the conductor to familiar faces. 'Some Weather! … Hot! … Hot! … Hot! … Is it hot enough … '" (Fitzgerald 121).
Term
Rhetor
Definition
The speaker who uses elements of rhetoric effectively in oral or written text.
Ex: F. Scott Fitzgerald is the rhetor in The Great Gatsby.
Term
Rhetoric
Definition
The art of analyzing all the choices involving language that a writer, speaker, reader, or listener might make in a situation so that the text becomes meaningful, purposeful, and effective; the specific features of texts, written or spoken, that cause them to be meaningful, purposeful, and effective for readers or listeners in a situation.
Ex: Diction, scheme, trope, argument, and syntax.
Term
Rhetorical Intention
Definition
Involvement and investment in and ownership of a piece of writing.
Ex: F. Scott Fitzgerald in The Great Gatsby has rhetorical intention.
Term
Rhetorical Question
Definition
 Question posed by the speaker or writer not to seek an answer but instead to affirm or deny a point simply by asking a question about it.
Ex: "Did this in Caesar seem ambitious?" (Shakespeare).
Term
Rhetorical Situation
Definition
The convergence in a situation of exigency (the need to write), audience, and purpose.
Ex: Before drafting my research paper, I had to analyze my purpose and how much background information to provide for my audience.
Term
Rhetorical Triangle
Definition
 diagram showing the relations of writer or speaker, reader or listener, and text in a rhetorical situation.
Term
Romance Language
Definition
A language that is derived from Latin.
Ex: French, Italian.
Term
Round Character
Definition
A figure with complexity in action and personality,
Ex: Jay Gatsby in The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald.
Term
Sarcasm
Definition
The use of mockery or bitter irony.
Ex: "That's so funny I forgot to laugh!"
Term
Scenic Narration
Definition
Narration in which an event or a moment of a plot is stretched out for dramatic effect.
Ex: In The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald, the scene in which Myrtle is accidentally killed.
Term
Six- Part Oration
Definition
In classical rhetoric, a speech consisting of exordium, narration, partition, confirmation, refutation, and peroration.
Ex: Franklin D. Roosevelt's First Inaugural Address follows this structure.
Term
Slang
Definition
Informal language, often considered inappropriate for formal occasions and text.
Ex: "This is sick."
Term
Soliloquy
Definition
Dialogue in which a character speaks aloud to himself or herself.
Ex: "To be or not to be, that is the question: / Whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer / The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune, / Or to take arms against a sea of troubles / And by opposing end them" (Shakespeare).
Term
Speaker
Definition
The person delivering a speech, or the character assumed to be speaking a poem.
Ex: Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Term
Stance
Definition
A writer's or speaker's apparent attitude toward the audience.
Ex: Franklin D. Roosevelt embraced the audience in his First Inaugural Address.
Term
Static Character
Definition
 figure who remains the same from the beginning to the end of a narrative.
Ex: Nick Carraway is essentially a static character in The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald.
Term
Style
Definition
The choices that writers or speakers make in language for effect.
Ex: Part of John Steinbeck's style is to focus on the setting in novels like The Grapes of Wrath.
Term
Subject
Definition
One of the points on the Aristotelian or rhetorical triangle; the subject matter a writer or speaker is writing or speaking about.
Ex: John Steinbeck was writing about the Dust Bowl in The Grapes of Wrath.
Term
Subordinate Clause
Definition
A group of words that includes a subject and verb but that cannot stand on its own as a sentence; also called dependent clause.
Ex: After the dog slept, the dog ran.
Term
Summary Narration
Definition
Narration in which a brief statement of events moves the plot quickly.
Ex: The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay by Michael Chabon includes many summary narrations when they jump years in time.
Term
Support
Definition
In a test, the material offered to make concrete or to back up a generalization, conclusion, or claim.
Ex: "Recent studies in the brain chemistry of rats show that when they play, their brains release large amounts of dopamine . . ." (Rifkin).
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