Rhetorical Appeals Ethos: Speakers appeal to ethos to demonstrate that they are credible and trustworthy. Pathos: is an appeal to emotions, values,

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Rhetorical Appeals Ethos: Speakers appeal to ethos to demonstrate that they are credible and trustworthy. Pathos: is an appeal to emotions, values, desires, and hopes, on the one hand, OR fears and prejudices, on the other Logos: speakers appeal to logos (reason) by offering clear, rational ideas. Appealing to logos means thinking logically – having a clear main idea and using specific details, examples, facts, statistics, or expert testimony to back it up.

SOAPStone Subject: The main focus Occasion: the time/place the text was written or spoken Audience: who is being written or spoken to Purpose: the goal the speaker/writer wants to achieve Speaker: who is writing or speaking Tone: “voice”