It is a deliberate process of casting subject into language; the same ideas can be expressed in different words with different effects.
Style Correct
It is a perspective that places metaphors at the heart of rhetorical action.
Metaphoric CriticismCorrect
It is a statement that is recast to stress it or achieve audience contact, as in the rhetorical question.
Figures of thoughtCorrect
It is also known as the art of persuasion.
RhetoricCorrect
It is an expression that gestures of honouring somebody.
EulogyCorrect
It is important to act as if telling a story as a part of the oration.
TrueCorrect
It is plagiarism if you just copy a small/short part of a text.
TrueCorrect
False
It is referring to the concept, object or person meant for the metaphor.
Tenor Correct
It is the art of oratory.
It is the art of oratoryCorrect
It is the assumption that the readers are already familiar with other texts and so borrowing freely from motifs that these texts employ.
Intertextuality Correct
It is the correctness of grammar and usage, clarity, ornamentation, and propriety.
VirtuesCorrect
It is the equivalence of Rhetoric.
DialecticCorrect
It is the faculty of observing in any given case the available means of persuasion.
RhetoricCorrect
It is the figures of speech and other symbolic languages that readers are expected to understand in a way that transcends the most literal application.
Symbolism Correct
It is the first women’s’ coalition newsletter.
PeithoCorrect
It is the image that carries the weight of the comparison.
VehicleCorrect
It is the order in which a narrative relates events, readers are expected to consider each new episode in light of what has gone before.
Ordering Events Correct
It is the part of classical rhetoric that expresses an idea to different words and effects.
StyleCorrect
It is the part of classical rhetoric that organizes the arguments.
ArrangementCorrect
It is the repetition of similar idea within a repeated grammatical structure, but doesn't involve the repetition of the same words.
ChiasmusCorrect
It is the repetition of the last word from the previous line, clause, or sentence at the beginning of the next.
AnadiplosisCorrect
It is the spatial, temporal, and social locations of events that are significant for how readers construe what is reported in a narrative.
Settings Correct
It may be flat and predictable or they may exhibit a wide variety of traits who are presented as enlightened in one instance and yet as lacking insight in another.
Characters Correct
It presents a diverse perspective concerning what is transpiring in the story, and readers are expected to regard some of these as more reliable than others.
Point of View Correct
It refers to the amount of space given to reporting individual episodes or by the number of times that a particular event is referenced in the narrative
Duration and Frequency of Events Correct
It refers to the readers’ perception of how the characters are and it may be shaped by comments from the narrator, by reports of the characters’ own words, deed, or perceptions
CharacterizationCorrect
It seeks to defend or condemn one’s actions and is concerned with the future.
Forensic Correct
Its goal is to identify aspects of the rhetorical action that explains its persuasive effect on the audience
Neo-Aristotelian CriticismCorrect
Lifting pictures from the internet and passing it off as your own is not plagiarism.
True
FalseCorrect
Lucas stipulates that those who engage in public speaking need "to be guided by a strong sense of knowledge".
True
FalseCorrect
Metaphor structures the way we think but not the way we act.
FalseCorrect
Metaphors mediate our experience and mediate among individuals creating common worlds.
falseCorrect
Monroe's Motivated Sequence is a way of organizing what kind ofspeech?
Persuasive SpeechCorrect
Nick Vujijic calls the title of his message as "Transforming the walls into Doors". What is most likely the paraphrase of this title?
changing obstacles into memories
changing obstacles into opportunitiesCorrect
changing moments into memories
changing suffering into surrender
Onomatopoeia
Use of words whose sound echoes the senseCorrect
Oration must be long
FalseCorrect
our friend is running for student council president and she is sharing with you her platform. What kind of listening do you need to apply?
Critical listeningCorrect
Comprehensive listening
Emphatic listening
Active listening
Parallelism
Similarity of structure Irony= Use of a word to convey a meaning opposite to the literal meaning of the wordCorrect
Pausing is vital during an oration.
TrueCorrect
Personification
Investing human qualities in abstractions or inanimate objectsCorrect
Plagiarism can lead to expulsion or facing of legal charges.
TrueCorrect
False
Practice is the most effective way to present a good oration.
TrueCorrect
Researching pieces of literature about the topic for an argumentative essay is important.
True Correct
Restating your position regarding the argument written must be a part of the conclusion in the essay.
TrueCorrect
Reviewing of notes should be done in which part of the interview?
Before the interview
During the interview
After the interviewCorrect
Throughout the entire interview process
Richard Nixon won the 1960 debate against John F. Kennedy.
FalseCorrect
Samira Gutoc is the only female senatorial candidate present on the Senatorial Debate hosted by CNN Philippines
TrueCorrect
Short speeches can use what kind of delivery?
Reciting from memoryCorrect
Impromptu speaking
Extemporaneous speaking
Reading from a manuscript
Signposting is a good way to write an argumentative essay.
FalseCorrect
The first step in the method of Neo-Aristotelian criticism.
Evaluate the contextCorrect
The goal is to determine the effects that stories are expected to have on their audience
Narrative CriticismCorrect
The success of a speech is highly dependent on which of the following elements?
SpeakerCorrect
Listener
Channel
Message
The topic must be stated at the beginning of a speech.
TrueCorrect
The use of notecards is allowed during an oration.
TrueCorrect
Use of body language and stressed sounds should not be practiced in an oration.
FalseCorrect
Vujijic: People are born with _______.
body
painCorrect
parents
faith
Vujijic: The greatest thing is _____.
beauty
loveCorrect
outlook
ego
We should define who we are and not _______.
What we can do
What we are notCorrect
All of the answers are correct
What we look like
We should view gender on a _____ instead of 2 opposing ideals.
SpectrumCorrect
Ideals
No correct answer
Scale
What are the concepts involved in the S.O.A.P.S in the rhetorical analysis writing? (5 possible answer)