Hortative 1.With the All Spark gone, we cannot return life to our planet. 2. We hunt for what remains of our Decepticon foes, hiding in different countries.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
List of terms used: argument introduction development conclusion illustrative anecdote point of view signposts links questions expectations premise explanations.
Advertisements

The Vietnam Conflict By: Shelbye Burkes! & Sydney Willis!
Identifying the Application of Rhetorical Terminology.
Martin Luther King Jr Language Techniques: -Metaphor = “ Flames of withering justice” or “ let freedom ring “ -Reference to authority = “ and the glory.
 Purpose:  declarative (.)  exclamatory (!)  imperative (command)  interrogative (?)
Rhetorical Devices and Structure.  Communicating an idea to an audience SPEAKER.
Varying a Theme: Parallel Structure, Chiasmus, Anaphora, Epistrophe.
Parallel structure Identify parallel structure Targets:
Communist Threats Faced by John F. Kennedy Chapter 16 Section 1.
Writing with Concord: Parallel Structure
Question 1 We are all equal human beings and we should “bind up the wounds among us” peacefully without violence against violence. To become “brothers.
JFK’s Inaugural Address “Let every nation know, whether it wishes us well or ill, that we shall pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support.
Rhetorical devices and their effects
JFK Modelled Response.
John Fitzgerald Kennedy (JFK) “Inaugural Address”
Bell Work Break down the following prompt using the steps we learned yesterday. Write down the prompt first, then break it down. Patrick Henry and Benjamin.
Speech in the VA Convention
Karla Brun 4 th block H. English 2 April 8, 2013.
Writing with Concord Parallel Structure
KENNEDY AND CUBA Mr. Marinello * US History. The election of 1960  Vice President Richard Nixon was the Republican nominee  MA Senator John Kennedy.
Virginia and United States History SOL Review Lyon
Parallelism.
Quick Write  Is failure something that is necessary in life? How have you learned from failure?
Introduction to Rhetorical Techniques “The duty and office of rhetoric is to apply reason to imagination for the better moving of the will.” – Francis.
CUBAN MISSILE CRISIS. OBJECTIVE Students will analyze primary source speeches and video clips in order to understand the events of the Cuban Missile Crisis.
The Presidential Election of 1960 The Candidates….
John F. Kennedy Inaugural Speech. Ted Sorenson about Kennedy: “He believed in the power and glory of words—both written and spoken—to win votes, to set.
By: Katelynn Sigrist Greg Tillotson Zachary Lents.
Presidential Bash Part I: Who said it?. “Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!” Ronald Reagan Berlin Wall.
Polysyndeton Definition: The repetition of conjunctions such as “and”, “or”, “for” and “but” in close succession, especially when most of them could be.
 Adds melody  Makes speech enjoyable to hear  Alliteration  Onomatopoeia.
The JFK Inaugural Address
Syntax An Introduction.
Regents Review Jeopardy Units 1 & 2 Geography, American Revolution & Constitution Unit 3 Westward Expansion, Civil War & Reconstruction Unit 4 Industrialization,
Gettysburg Address Given by Abraham Lincoln. Speaker: Abraham Lincoln  16th President of the United States  Speech given during the Civil War.  Term:
Predicting American Ideals Which team can predict the guiding American ideals first?
Rhetorical Terms APPLICATION PRACTICE (LOC Ch. 2).
SPEECH IS POWER Vocabulary. What is a speech?  A nonfiction work that is delivered orally to an audience.
RHETORICAL DEVICES What makes a speech powerful?.
Rhetorical Devices. rhetoric  the study of effective thinking, writing, and speaking strategies.
ESSAY UNIT LESSON TWO FIGURES OF SPEECH  Advanced parts of speech  The use of these tools will make your speaking and your writing move from good to.
John F. Kennedy Inaugural Address. Rhetorical Triangle Speaker Youngest US president voted into office First Roman Catholic president Won by a small margin.
Writing with Concord Parallel Structure
Rhetorical Devices.
Let’s Talk: What is the greatest speech you have ever heard? This could be historical or from a film. What makes that speech so memorable for you?
Language and Comp Tropes and Schemes Trope: The use of a word, phrase, or image in a way not intended by its normal signification. Scheme: A change in.
J.F.Kennedy Ask Not What Your Country Can Do For You
How did America’s military forces defend freedom during the Cold War?
Rhetorical Devices In Non-Fiction
Rhetorical Devices “Use it or lose it.”.
Citing sources Setting up Quotes Integrating quotes
Language and writer’s craft: parallel structure
Style and Tone of Speeches
The JFK Inaugural Address
Writing with Concord: Parallel Structure
Writing with Concord: Parallel Structure
AP Bell Ringers: Rhetorical Devices
Writing with Concord: Parallel Structure
Ellipsis to Show Omission
Memorable Speeches Ms. Dietsch
Writing with Concord: Parallel Structure
Examining rhetorical strategies used to convey purpose
Writing with Concord: Parallel Structure
Writing with Concord Parallel Structure
Taken from A Common Sense Guide for Teaching Common Core Literacy
Rhetorical Devices…SPEECHES!
Language and Comp Tropes and Schemes Trope: The use of a word, phrase, or image in a way not intended by its normal signification. Scheme: A change in.
Rhetorical Strategies
Rhetorical Devices In Argument
Presentation transcript:

Hortative 1.With the All Spark gone, we cannot return life to our planet. 2. We hunt for what remains of our Decepticon foes, hiding in different countries around the globe. 3. We scattered across the galaxy, hoping to find it and rebuild our home, searching every star, every world.

Asyndeton and Anaphora Asyndeton – leaving out conjunctions between words, phrases, clauses Anaphora- repetition of a word or phrase as the beginning of successive clauses 300- Dilios Final Speech “ ‘Remember us’. As simple an order as a king can give. ‘Remember why we died.’ For he did not wish tribute or song. No monuments, no poems of war and valor. His wish was simple: ‘Remember us.’ “

“The Morality of Birth Control” Allusion- A reference to another work of literature, person, or event “When women fought for higher education, it was said that this would cause her to become immoral and she would lose her place in the sanctity of the home” This was a reference to Women's suffrage when they fought for higher education, right to vote, and labor. Using allusion in this speech was effective because its all about how women fought for their rights and now women are fighting for their morality.

General George Patton’s Speech to the Third Army General Patton used profanity as a Rhetorical device to truly impact the hearts of his men. The profanity he used in his speech gave it meaning to the men and Patton portrayed himself through the profanity as being hardnosed. It made them think that they had the roughest toughest general leading them into battle.

Antimetabole/Rhetorical question “Is not this simpler? Is this not your natural?” -Loki Laufeyson The Avengers Not and this in the first sentence is swapped out of order from normal speaking, like the second sentence. Neither of these questions were asked for an answer, making them rhetorical.

Parallelism Iv been to the Mountain Top By: Martin Luther King Jr. In his speech is is using the same phrase in the same grammatical form to show how serious he is on how “far he will go.” “I would move on… I would go on…. I would even come up… I would even go….”

Parallelism The use of a series of words, phrases, or sentences that have similar grammatical form. JFK Inaugural Address, 1961 “Let every nation know, whether it wishes us well or ill, that we shall pay any price, bear any burden meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe, in order to assure the survival and the success of libert y.” John F. Kennedy

First Inaugural Address of Franklin D. Roosevelt Figurative Language- A way of communicating ideas without using the literal meaning of the words. “The withered leaves of industrial enterprise lie on every side”

“It was here [France] the Declaration of the Rights of Man was proclaimed, and the great slogans of the French Revolution– liberty, equality, fraternity– fired the imagination of men.” Asyndeton- leaving out conjunctions between words, phrases, clauses