0
AH020387 Posted 15 years ago
Vocabulary

Rhetoric

Rhetoric usually refers to speech which is too long or too pompous?
  

Top answer

Rhetoric refers to the devices used to deliver a speech. For example, use of emotional appeals, slogans, personal stories, metaphors, parallel structure, summation, repetition of key phrases. Rhetoric covers how to give a speech, rather than the value of what is said.

  • Rhetoric refers to the devices used to deliver a speech.
  • For example, use of emotional appeals, slogans, personal stories, metaphors, parallel structure, summation, repetition of key phrases.
  • Rhetoric covers how to give a speech, rather than the value of what is said.
  • Because of this, the term may have the sense of empty, meaningless speech ("mere rhetoric").
  • Length has nothing to do with the question.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

1 Answers
0
Rhetoric refers to the devices used to deliver a speech. For example, use of emotional appeals, slogans, personal stories, metaphors, parallel structure, summation, repetition of key phrases. Rhetoric covers how to give a speech, rather than the value of what is said. Because of this, the term may have the sense of empty, meaningless speech ("mere rhetoric"). Length has nothing to do with

Related Questions