Professional Documents
Culture Documents
a. Enthymeme
b. Ethos
c. Topoi
d. Rhetoric
induction? a. Example
b. Syllogism
c. Rhetor
d. Enthymeme
What specific proof is presented in the example: All teenagers today are too liberated and
bold due to modern technology.
a. Fallible Signs
=Aristotle
=Epideictic
Which example BEST describes an enthymeme?
a. Goal is communication
b. Emphasis is on emotional evidence
c. Rhetor-audience relationship is cooperative. d.
Rational proofs is most important
It is the first women’s’ coalition newsletter.
=Peitho
It is the part of classical rhetoric that expresses an idea to different words and effects.
=Style
A type of argument that a speaker invent with ethos, logos and pathos.
a. External
b. Rhetorike
c. Artistic
d. Syllogism
Which are Aristotle’s appeals/modes of proofs?
a. Arrangement
b. Style
c. Memory
d. Introduction
a. Elocutio
b. Peitho
c. Topoi
d. Exordium
a. Topoi
b. Logos
c. hos
Et
d. Pathos
A rational appeal that generalizes a conclusion from analogous facts.
Syllogism
Artistic
Enthymeme d. Inductive
It is a deliberate process of casting subject into language; the same ideas can be expressed
in different words with different effects.
=Style
=Dictio
Irony= Use of a word to convey a meaning opposite to the literal meaning of the word
= Rhetorike
It aids in discovering argument for rhetoric discourse.
= Topoi
“Don’t you surrender! Suffering breeds character; character breeds faith; in the end faith will
not disappoint. You must not surrender.” –Jesse Jackson, what figure of speech does the
statement represents?
= Anadiplosis
Which is Aristotle’s figure of speeches?
=
= Non-artistic
It is the faculty of observing in any given case the available means of persuasion.
= Rhetoric
It consists of two contrasting ideas that are intentionally juxtaposed.
= Antithesis
Which is NOT a rhetorical figure?
= Eulogy
= Scientific Facts
It seeks to defend or condemn one’s actions and is concerned with the future.
= Forensic
An artistic argument that supports the rational appeal.
= Pathos
Which is NOT a canon of classical rhetoric?
= Refutation
It informs and render subject for the discourse.
= Exordium
It is the repetition of similar idea within a repeated grammatical structure, but doesn't
involve the repetition of the same words.
= Chiasmus
It is the repetition of the last word from the previous line, clause, or sentence at the
beginning of the next.
= Anadiplosis
It is an expression that gestures of honouring somebody.
= Eulogy
Which statement presents an introduction paradoxical?
= “As I assess myself, I can do anything but dance.”
It contains literary cues that run contrary to what might initially appear to be the obvious
interpretation that readers are expected to interpret in the story.
=Irony
=Characterization
It refers to the readers’ perception of how the characters are and it may be shaped by
=Symbolism
comments fromofthe narrator,
It is the figures speech and by reports
other of thelanguages
symbolic characters’ own
that words,are
readers deed, or
expected
Ittois understand
the assumption that that
in a way the readers are already
transcends the mostfamiliar with other texts and so borrowing
literal application.
freely from motifs that these texts employ.
=Intertextuality
=Settings
It is the spatial, temporal, and social locations of events that are significant for how
=Characters
readers construe
It may be flat andwhat is reported
predictable in amay
or they narrative.
exhibit a wide variety of traits who are
=Point of
presented View
It presents as enlightened
a diverse in one concerning
perspective instance andwhat
yet as lacking insight
is transpiring in story,
in the another.
and readers
=Duration
are and
expected Frequency
to regard of
some Events
of these as more reliable than others.
It refers to the amount of space given to reporting individual episodes or by the number
Itofdrives
timesthe plot
that and involves
a particular the
event is readers in the
referenced adjudication
in the narrative. of opposing tendencies.
=Conflict
It is a perspective that places metaphors at the heart of rhetorical action.
=False
It is the image that carries the weight of the comparison.
=Vehicle
Richard Nixon won the 1960 debate against John F. Kennedy.
= False
Which are Aristotle’s appeals/modes of proofs?
= Ethos, Pathos and Logos
A type of argument that a speaker invent with ethos, logos and pathos.
= Artistic
=False
What was the former President Ramon Magsaysay's 1956 speech about?
=Voting
= concise
= grammatically correct
=coherent
=written in present tense
Samira Gutoc is the only female senatorial candidate present on the Senatorial Debate
hosted by CNN Philippines.
=True
What are the three kinds of discourse?
= Forensic, Political and Epideictic
What are the concepts involved in the S.O.A.P.S in the rhetorical analysis writing? (5 possible
answer)
= Audience
= Subject
= Purpose
= Occasion
=Speaker
It is also known as the art of persuasion.
= Rhetoric
What comprises the rhetoric discourse?
= Rhetor, Audience and Subject
Researching pieces of literature about the topic for an argumentative essay is important.
= True
Researching pieces of literature about the topic for an argumentative essay is important.
True
Restating your position regarding the argument written must be a part of the conclusion in the
essay.
True
True
It is the faculty of observing in any given case the available means of persuasion.
c. Rhetoric
It includes "tropes," literally "turnings" or substitutions of one term for
another; as in metaphor.
a. Ornamentation
c. Vehicle
b. Enthymeme
It seeks to defend or condemn one’s actions and is concerned with the future.
a. Forensic
It is the repetition of similar idea within a repeated grammatical structure, but
doesn't involve the repetition of the same words.
b. Chiasmus
An argument emphasizes on a person’s credibility and goodness. b. Ethos
A type of argument that a speaker invent with ethos, logos and pathos. a.
Artistic
d. Virtues
It is a deliberate process of casting subject into language; the same ideas can be
expressed in different words with different effects.
d. Style
d. Every person has the right to live. I’m a person; therefore I have the right to
live.
Which is NOT a division of dispositio? d.
Pathos
True
False
a. Refutation
It informs and render subject for the discourse. d.
Exordium
The goal is to determine the effects that stories are expected to have on their
audience.
d. Narrative Criticism
It aids in discovering argument for rhetoric discourse. b.
Topoi
Metaphor structures the way we think but not the way we act.
False
It is the part of classical rhetoric that expresses an idea to different words and
effects.
Select one:
a. Style
What specific proof is presented in the example: All teenagers today are too
liberated and bold due to modern technology.
d. Fallible Signs
Question text
It is the repetition of the last word from the previous line, clause, or sentence
at the beginning of the next.
a. Anadiplosis
“Don’t you surrender! Suffering breeds character; character breeds faith; in the
end faith will not disappoint. You must not surrender.” –Jesse Jackson, what
figure of speech does the statement represents?
a. Anadiplosis
A type of argument that do not require a speaker to invent, such as laws. d. Non-
artistic
Question 1
Select one:
Question 2
Select one:
a. Euthenics
b. Elegy
c. Antithesis
d. Eulogy
Question 3
It is the repetition of the last word from the previous line, clause, or sentence at the beginning of the
next.
Select one:
a. Anadiplosis
b. Chiasmus
c. Antithesis
d. Metathesis
Question 4
It is the repetition of similar idea within a repeated grammatical structure, but doesn't involve the
repetition of the same words.
Select one:
a. Antithesis
b. Anadiplosis
c. Chiasmus
d. Metathesis
Question 5
It is a song or a poem with a lamenting tone that expresses loss of a family member or a loved one.
Select one:
a. Euthenics
b. Antithesis
c. Eulogy
d. Elegy
Question 6
Select one:
a. Refutation
b. Pathos
c. Digression
d. Exordium
Question 7
Select one:
a. Pathos
b. Exordium
c. Peroration
d. Refutation
Question 8
“And so, my fellow Americans, ask not what your country can do for you; ask what you can do for your
country.” –J.F.K, what figure of speech does the statement represents?
Select one:
a. Anadiplosis
b. Antithesis
c. Chiasmus
d. Antimetabole
Question 9
Which is NOT a canon of classical rhetoric?
Select one:
a. Invention
b. Refutation
c. Memory
d. Delivery
Question 10
Select one:
a. Ethos
b. Logos
c. Topoi
d. Pathos
Question 11
It seeks to defend or condemn one’s actions and is concerned with the future.
Select one:
a. Argumentative
b. Ceremonial
c. Forensic
d. Political
Question 12
Select one:
a. Speech
b. Scientific Facts
c. Literature
d. Jokes
Question 13
Select one:
a. Eulogy
b. Hyperbole
c. Simile
d. Oxymoron
Question 14
Select one:
a. Antimetabole
b. Anadiplosis
c. Chiasmus
d. Antithesis
Question 15
It is the faculty of observing in any given case the available means of persuasion.
Select one:
a. Enthymeme
b. Ethos
c. Rhetoric
d. Topoi
Question 16
Select one:
a. Non-artistic
b. Rhetorike
c. Artistic
d. Syllogism
Question 17
Select one:
b. Ethos, Pathos and Logos (TRY LANG KUNG TAMA TO ANG SAGOT)
Question 18
“Don’t you surrender! Suffering breeds character; character breeds faith; in the end faith will not
disappoint. You must not surrender.” –Jesse Jackson, what figure of speech does the statement
represents?
Select one:
a. Antithesis
b. Antimetabole
c. Anadiplosis
d. Chiasmus
Question 19
Select one:
a. Elocutio
b. Peitho
c. Topoi
d. Exordium
Question 20
Select one:
a. Syllogism
b. Dialectic
c. Rhetorike
d. Enthymeme
Question 21
Write an analysis from the speech given below; it must include your perspective towards the meaning of
the speech and the different rhetorics that are related to it.
Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent a new nation, conceived in
Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.
Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation, or any nation, so conceived and so
dedicated, can long endure. We are met on a great battle-field of that war. We have come to dedicate a
portion of that field, as a final resting place for those who here gave their lives that that nation might
live. It is altogether fitting and proper that we should do this. But, in a larger sense, we cannot
dedicate–we cannot consecrate–we cannot hallow–this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who
struggled here, have consecrated it, far above our poor power to add or detract. The
world will little note, nor long remember what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here. It
is for us the living, rather, to be dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who fought here have
thus far so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us
– that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last
full measure of devotion – that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain – that
this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom – and that government of the people, by the
people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth. (https://etc.usf.edu/lit2go/pdf/passage/4822/ a-
lincoln-anthology-003-the-gettysburg- address.pdf)
*Note: You may use different sources; however, plagiarism is illegal so make sure to use your own words
and let your creativity and comprehension skills build
d. Antimetabole
It is the repetition of the last word (or phrase) from the previous line, clause, or sentence at the
beginning of the next.
a. Anadiplosis
Question text
b. Eulogy
Question text
The ship has weather’d every rack, the prize we sought is won,
The port is near, the bells I hear, the people all exulting,
While follow eyes the steady keel, the vessel grim and daring;
Question text
What figure of speech is present in the expression, "When the going gets tough, the tough get going."?
a. Antimetabole
Question text
What figure of speech is present in the line, “Fear leads to anger. Anger leads to hate. Hate leads to
suffering.”?
c. Anadiplosis
Question text
What figure is speech is presented in the line, “All for one and one for all!”?
c. Antimetabole
Question text
It is a song or a poem with a lamenting tone that expresses loss of a family member or a loved one.
b. Elegy
Question text
It is a published biography intended to recount the life of someone who recently died.
c. Obituary
Question text
It is the repetition of similar concepts within a repeated grammatical structure, but doesn't necessarily
involve the repetition of the same words.
c. Chiasmus tama