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RhetoricTerms- 2 Word Search Puzzle

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Word Meaning
Allegory  Narrative form in which characters and actions have meanings outside themselves; characters are usually personifications of abstract qualities.  
Allusion  Figure of speech that makes a brief and casual reference to a historical or literary figure, event, or object to create a resonance in the reader or to apply symbolic meaning.  
Ambiguity  Use of language in which multiple meanings are possible.  
Anachronism  Use of historically inaccurate details in a text.  
Analogy  Comparison of two things that are alike in some respects. Metaphors and similies are two types.  
Analysis  The process in writing wherein one examines what the writer has done to create the effects she or he has gotten in a piece of writing.  
Appeals to... :  Rhetorical arguements in which the speaker appeals to authority, emotion, or logic.  
Assonance  Repition of identical or similiar vowel sounds, usually in successive or proximate words.  
Catharsis  Purification or cleansing of the spirit of the viewer or reader through the emotions of pity and terror as a witness to tragedy.  
Cliche  A commonplace expression that reveals the writers lack of imagination to use fresher, more vivid language.  
Climactic  The arrangement of words, phrases, or clauses in order of increasing importance.  
Colloquial/Colloquialism  Ordinary language, vernacular.  
Consonance  The repetition of two or more consanants with a change in intervening vowels.  
Deductive  The reasoning process by which a conclusion is drawn from a set of premises and contains no more facts than these premises.  
Deus Ex Machina  As in Greek theater, use of an artifical device or contrived solution to solve a difficult situation, usually introduced suddenly and unexpectedly.  
Devices  A particular word pattern or combination of words used in a literary work to evoke a desired effect or arouse a desired reaction in a reader.  
Ellipsis  Deleberate omission of a word or words which are implied by the context. Also name of (...).  
Epigraph  Quote set at the beginning of a literary work or at itds divisions to set a tone or suggest a theme.  
Epitaph  A pice of writing in praise of a deceased person.  
Ethos  Appeal to moral elements of right and wrong, ethics.  
Expletive  A single word or short phrase intended to emphasize surrounding words.  
Explication  Interpretation or analysis of facts.  
Genre  The major catogory in which a literary work fits. Include prose, poetry, and drama.  
Homily  A serious talk, speech, or lecture involving moral or spiritual advice, a 'sermon'.  
Hyperbole  Overstatement characterized by exaggerated language.  
Inductive  Conclusion or type of reasoning whereby observation or information about a part of a class is applied to the class as a whole.  
Inference  The process of arriving at a conclusion from a hint, implication, or suggestion.  
Juxtaposition  Placing of two items side by side to create a certain effect, reveal an attitude, or accomplish some other purpose.  
Logical Fallacies  Errors in reasoning that occur in arguements.  
Logos  Use or appeal to reason to determine a characters actions or persuade to an argument.  
Metaphor  Implicit comparison or identifaction of one thing with another unlike itself without the use of a verbal signal such as like or as.  
Nostalgia  Desire to return in thought or fact to a former time.  
Oxymoron  A figure of speech that combines two apparently contradictory elements, as in 'jumbo shrimp'.  
Paradox  A statement that seems contradictory, but is actually true.  
Paraphrase  Putting someone else's ideas into your own words.  
Parenthesis  Inversion of some verbal unit in a position that interrupts the normal syntactical flow of the sentences. ( ) symbols.  
Parallelism  Recurrent syntactical similiarity where several parts of a sentence or several sentences are expressed alike to show that the ideas in parts or sentences equal in importance.  
Parody  A satirical imitation of a work of art for purpose of ridiculing its style or subject.  
Pathos  The use of or appeal to emotional or sentimental elements to describe a character's actions or persuade to an argument.  
Persona  The voice or figure of the author who tells and structures the story and who may or may not share the values of the actual author.  
Personification  Treating nonhuman objects as if they were a person by giving it human qualities.  
Perspective  A character's view of a situation or events in a story.  
Propaganda  Information or rumor deliberately spread to help or harm a person, group, or institution.  
Realism  Literary practice of attempting to describe life and nature without idealization and with attention to detail.  
Reflective  A piece of writing that gives considered thought to something.  
Repetition  Repeating or repeated action.  
Retrospection  Looking back on things past.  
Rhetoric  The art of using language effectively to serve the writer's purpose, orignially referred to speech-making. It now encompases composition, and is divided into exposition, narration, description, and arguementation.  
Rhetorical device  Particular use of word patterns and styles to clarify, make associations, and focues the writing in a piece of literature.  
Rhetorical question  Asking a question for the purpose of eliciting an answer but not for the purpose of asserting or denying something obliquely. A question not meant to be answered verbally.  
Sarcasm  A sharp caustic remark. A form of verbal irony that is harshly critical.  
Satire  Humorous, witty criticism of people's foolish, thoughtless, or evil behaviour.  
Speaker  The person- not necessarily the author- who is the voice of the poem or story.  
Symbolism  A person, place, thing, event, or pattern in a literary work that designates itself and at the same time figuratively represents something else.  
Syntax  The way words are put together to form phrases, cluases, and sentences.  
Tone  The attitude a literary work takes towards its subject and theme. Reflects author's attitude.  
Transition  Writer's ability to move the reader smoothly along the course of ideas.  
Understatement  Deliberate expression of an idea or event as less important that it actually is or was.  
Wit  In modern usage, intellectualy amusing language that surprises or delights.  
Eulogy  A speech or writing in praise of a person or thing; an oration in honor of a deceased person.  
Euphemism  Subsitituion of a milder or less direct expression for one that is harsh or blunt.