Chapter 5 Public Speaking
An infinitive phrase is a single infinitive phrase that states precisely what a speaker hopes to accomplish in his or her speech.
False
The central idea is what a speaker wants the audience to remember after it has forgotten everything else in a speech.
False
The residential message is a one-sentence statement that sums up or encapsulates the major ideas of a speech.
False
There are 5 different brainstorming procedures you can use.
False
When choosing a topic, you don't need to determine the general purpose of the speech.
Flase
A topic is the subject of a speech.
True
Brainstorming is a method of generating ideas for speech topics by free association of words and ideas.
True
The central idea is sometimes often also called thesis statement, the subject sentence, or the major thought.
True
The central idea refines and sharpens your specific purpose.
True
The central idea should be expressed in a full sentence, should not be in the form of a question, should avoid figurative language, and should not be vague or overly general.
True
The first step in speech making is choosing a topic.
True
The general purpose is the broad goal of the speech.
True
The specific purpose of a speech is what you hope to accomplish.
True
The specific purpose statement should be a full infinitive phrase; be worded as a statement, not a question; avoid figurative language; concentrate on one distinct idea; not be vague or general.
True
You should avoid figurative language in your purpose statement.
True