Rhetorical device: Difference between revisions
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"'''rhetoric'''" = "the art of use of language for persuasion" | "'''rhetoric'''" = "the art of use of language for persuasion" | ||
* | * see page entry for [[Rhetoric]] | ||
== Rhetorical devices list == | |||
=== ad hominem === | === ad hominem === |
Revision as of 14:10, 30 October 2022
"rhetoric" = "the art of use of language for persuasion"
- see page entry for Rhetoric
Rhetorical devices list[edit | edit source]
ad hominem[edit | edit source]
apophasis[edit | edit source]
- also called "Paralipsis"
- author mentions an argument or fact in order to deny it or to deny using it
- also used to mention something indirectly
- = a form of irony
- may be seen as a "passive-aggressive" argument
- in that it states something while apologizing for having stated it
- may be seen as a "passive-aggressive" argument
- examples:
- "But we won't talk about my opponent's disastrous married life"
- "It would be a breach of decorum to mention base morals such as she embodies"
- actual use of paralipses:
- during Prohibition (when sale of alcohol was banned), a grape juice company included this paralipsis on its grape concentrate packaging:
- "After dissolving the brick in a gallon of water, do not place the liquid in a jug away in the cupboard for twenty days, because then it would turn into wine."
- during the 1984 presidential debates, Ronald Reagan, who was much older than his opponent, stated,
- "I will not make age an issue of this campaign. I am not going to exploit, for political purposes, my opponent's youth and inexperience."
- during Prohibition (when sale of alcohol was banned), a grape juice company included this paralipsis on its grape concentrate packaging:
paralipsis[edit | edit source]
- see Apophasis