Rhetorical Devices | Elements In A Persuasive Writing | Persuasive Writing Process | The 3 Persuasive Appeals | Other |
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What is repetition.
Small repeated phrases for used for emphasis to get in the reader's head.
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What is a thesis.
Describes the main point of the writing.
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What is pre-writing.
An outline that gathers all your ideas together.
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What is ethos.
Appeal to ethics.
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What is a fact.
Something that can be proven.
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What is allusion.
Original text that is used in the present.
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What is text evidence.
Helps support your answer.
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What is the body.
Where you explain your point of view towards the topic.
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What is pathos.
Appeal to emotions.
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What is an opinion.
Your own belief on a topic that does not have any evidence to prove it,
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What is varied sentence length.
Expanding the sentence length to strengthen the writing style.
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What is a topic sentence.
A sentence that describes what your reason is going to be about.
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What is the conclusion.
Making a final impression on the reader through this.
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What is ethos.
This expresses fairness and mortality.
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What is the audience.
The people who listen to the speaker's point of view.
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What is antithesis.
Figure of speech that contrasts ideas.
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What is an attention grabber (hook).
Ar the beginning that gets the reader interested in what they're about to read.
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What is the introduction.
Telling the reader what your writing is going to be about. The first part of your writing.
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What is pathos.
Responding out of your own opinions.
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What is point of view.
The speaker's side towards the topic.
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What is hypophora.
When you ask a question and answer it yourself.
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What is a transition.
Smoothly moving onto the next topic.
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What is a draft.
Writing down your thoughts in paragraph form for the first time.
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What is logos.
Using your intellects.
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What is tone.
How the writer or speaker sounds towards the topic.
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