Public Speaking
Connotation
A word is the meaning we associate with the word, based on our past experiences.
Final summary
A final summary occurs just before the end of a speech, often doing double duty as a transition between the body and the conclusion.
Repetition
A key word or phrase gives rhythm and power to a message and makes it memorable.
Credibility
A speaker's believability.
Preview
A statement of what is to come.
Denotation
A words is its literal meaning, the definition you find in a dictionary.
Spatial organization
Arranges item according to their location And direction
Closure
Both verbally and non verbally. Verbal techniques include using such transition as finally. For my last point and in conclusion.
Startling facts or statistics
Can help your audience remember afterward what you had to say.
Nonverbal transitions
Can occur in several ways, sometimes alone and sometimes in combination with verbal transition.
Illustration or anecdotes
Can provide the basis for an effective conclusion. Help audience focus on the main points of your speech and how their attention.
Anecdote
Can provide the basis for an effective speech introduction. In fact, if you have an especially compelling illustration that you had planned to use in the body of the speech.
Five organizational patterns
Chronological, topical, spatial, cause and effect, and problem-solution.
Suspension
Copywriter stylize the message by making the advertise word last. Because it is more memorable due to it used in an unexpected way.
Recency
Events discussed last is usually the one the audience will remember best.
Cause and effect
First identify a situation and then discuss the effects that result form it (cause->effect). Or, the speech may present a situation and then seeks its causes (effect->cause).
Purpose of introductions
Get the audience's attention, introduce the subject, give the audience a reason to listen, establish your credibility, and preview your main ideas.
Problem-solution pattern
If you are speaking to an audience that is already fairly aware of a problem discuss the problem first and then the solution.
Topical organization
If your central idea has natural divisions, you can often organize your speech topically.
Metaphor
Implied comparison
Internal preview
In addition to using previews near the beginning of their speeches, speakers also use them at various points throughout.
Hard evidence
Includes factual examples and statistics.
Internal summary
Internal summaries, as their name suggest, occur within and throughout a speech. They are often used after two or three points have been discussed, to keep those fresh in the minds of the audience as the speech progress.
Favorable
It is possible to gain an audience's attention but in so doing to alienate them or disgust them so that they become irritated instead of interested in what you have to say.
Omission
Leave out a word or phrase that the audience expects to hear.
Simile
Less direct comparison they includes the word like or as.
Standard outline form
Lets you see at a glance the exact relationship among various main ideas, sub points, and supporting martial in your speech.
Preparation outline
Main ideas, sub points, supporting material, the speech's specific purpose, introduction, conclusion, signpost.
Oral style
More personal, less formal, and more repetitious.
Parallelism
Occurs when two or more clauses or sentence have the same grammatical pattern.
Chronological organization
Organization by time; that is, your steps are ordered according to when each occurred or should occur.
Complexity
Progressing from the simple to the more complex.
Humor
Put The audience in a relaxed frame of mind so that they leave with a sense o enjoyment at what you have told them and goodwill toward you as the speaker.
Primacy
Putting the most important or convincing idea first.
Soft evidence
Rest on opinion or inference. Hypothetical illustrations, descriptions, explanations, definitions, analogies, and opinions are usually considered soft.
Inversion
Reverse the normal word order of a phrase or sentence.
Photocopies
Search for what you need and then write or type this supporting material into your speech plan.
Verbal transition
Speakers can transition non verbally or by using a variety of different verbal transitions, including repeating a key word; using well-known transitional phrases; enumerating, and numbering points; or offering internal previews or summaries.
Personification
The attribution of human qualities to inanimate things or ideas.
Ethic vernacular
The combination of English and Spanish often heard near the united state-Mexico border.
Rhetorical question
The kind you don't expect an answer to.
Standard u.s. English
The language taught by schools and used in the media, business, and the government in the United States.
Delivery outline
The name implies, is meant to give you all you will need to present your speech in the way you have planned and rehearsed.
Initial preview
The preview statement is a statement of what the main ideas of the speech will be.
Alliteration
The repetition of a consonant sound several time in a phrase, clause, or sentence.
Antithesis
Two parts with parallel structures but contrasting meanings.
Thesaurus
Used to search for a specific, concrete word.
Regionalisms
Words or phrases specific to one part of the country but rarely used in quite the same way in other places.
Note cards
Write each main idea and sub points separate.
Mapping
Write on a sheet of paper all the main ideas, sub points, and supporting material for the speech.
Question
focuses the audience's attention.