Rhetorical Elements 131-147
Syllogistic Progression
?
Testimony
A rhetorical term for a person's account of an event or state of affairs Ex. "One of the Soviet Georgia's senior citizens thought Dannon was an excellent yogurt. She ought to know. She's been eating yogurt for 137 years." (advertising campaign for Dannon Yogurt)
Tapinosis
A rhetorical term for name calling: undignified language that debases a person or thing
Synathroesmus
A rhetorical term for the piling up of words (usually adjectives) Ex. "He was a gasping, wheezing, clutching, covetous old man"
Zeugma
A rhetorical term for the use of a word to modify or govern two or more words although its use may be grammatically or logically correct with only one
Trope
Another term for a figure of speech A rhetorical device that produces a shift in the meanings of words
Tenor
In a metaphor, the tenor is the principal subject illuminated by the vehicle (that is, the actual figurative expression). The interaction of tenor and vehicle evokes the meaning of the metaphor. Ex. For example, if you call a lively or outspoken person a "firecracker" ("The guy was a real firecracker, determined to live life on his own terms"), the aggressive person is the tenor and "firecracker" is the vehicle.
Sprezzatura
The rehearsed spontaneity, studied carelessness, and well-practiced naturalness that underlies persuasive discourse Ex. "Float like a butterfly; sting like a bee"
Understatement
a figure of speech in which a writer or speaker deliberately makes a situation seem less important or serious than it is
Syllepsis
a rhetorical term for a kind of ellipsis in which one word (usually a verb) is understood differently in relation to two or more other words, which it modifies or governs
Tetracolon Climax
a rhetorical term for a series of four members (words, phrases, or clauses), usually in parallel form
Tricolon
a rhetorical term for a series of three parallel words, phrases, or clauses
Synechdoche
figure of speech in which a part of something is used to represent the whole (for example, ABCs for alphabet)
Vehicle
the actual figurative expression of a metaphor
Topics
the particular issue or idea that serves as the subject of a paragraph, essay, report, or speech
Voice
voice is the quality of a verb that indicates whether its subject acts (active voice) or is acted upon (passive voice)