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Rhetorical Terms Review #4 Jargon, Analogy, Understatement, Paradox, Antithesis, Satire
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Jargon (Diction) DEF: Specialized/idiomatic diction endemic to a group with a particular interest. (ex. Profession or hobby) Characterized by precise and definitions known to the group. Ex: Military, Science, Education Slang tends to be informal and inclusive.
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Analogy (Detail, Structure) DEF: A comparison between two things: one known and one to be defined. PURPOSE: The inference that if two similar things are alike in some ways, they will be alike in others.
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Analogy Examples Teaching Kids to share Marathons require incremental training that builds skill and endurance Boys tend to solve problems with fights Incentives for charity Preparing for the AP Test will take all year. Men in power solve problems with war
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Understatement (Diction) DEF: Deliberately expressing an idea as less important than it is. PURPOSE: Determined by context (think about “Wax Poetic”) Tact and Politeness: - Your uncle’s had a bit to drink. - We’re having a little problem. (As your house floods.) -T-The recent hurricane has provided us with a few challenges.
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Understatement Con’t Ironic and Comic Effect: -S-Stalin killed a few people. -L-Last week I saw a woman flayed, and you will hardly believe how much it altered her person for the worse. -- Jonathan Swift
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Antithesis (syntax) Presentation of Opposites in Parallel Form United we Stand; divided we fall. “Freedom is never voluntarily given by the oppressor; it must be demanded by the oppressed.” -MLK
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Paradox A statement that seems contradictory on the surface but reveals a deeper truth. “If we want peace, we must prepare for war.” “When the white man turns tyrant, it is his own freedom he destroys.” - Orwell “…an individual who breaks an unjust law…is in reality expressing the highest respect for the law.” - MLK
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Satire (Tone Purpose) DEF: a style of writing that ridicules human vice or weakness PURPOSE: to correct or criticize the subject of the satire. (often persuasive in aim) Satire usually takes something well-known and draws absurd parallels or conclusions to show flaws. Satire can use many tactics including, wax poetic, understatement, and mock-serious/heroic. Irony is frequently present.
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Satire Examples Headlines from The Onion “Teen Lands Job With Fortune 500 Company” “Majority Of Americans Never Use Physical Education After High School”
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