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Rhetorical Devices. AP Language. Balance Schemes. Purpose: To evenly distribute focus of individual concepts within a scheme: it also helps with the “flow” of a piece. Schemes involving Balance. Parallelism The repetition of similar grammatical or syntactical patterns.
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Rhetorical Devices AP Language
Balance Schemes • Purpose: • To evenly distribute focus of individual concepts within a scheme: it also helps with the “flow” of a piece.
Schemes involving Balance • Parallelism • The repetition of similar grammatical or syntactical patterns. • Parallelism of words • Parallelism of phrases • Parallelism of clauses MOST COMMON!
Examples • Parallelism of words • “Exercise physiologists argue that body-pump aerobics sessions benefit a person’ s heart and lungs, muscles and nerves, and joints and cartilage. • Parallelism of phrases • “Exercise physiologists argue that body-pump aerobics sessions help a person breathe more effectively, move with less discomfort, and avoid injury of muscles and cartilage. Active verb
Example • Parallelism of clauses • “Exercise physiologists argue that body-pump aerobics is the most efficient exercise class, thatbody-pump participants show greater gains in stamina then participants in comparable exercise programs, and that body-pump aerobics is less expensive in terms of equipment and training needed to lead or take classes.”
Zeugma (zoog-mah) • A figure in which more than one item in a sentence is governed by a single word, usually a verb.
Examples of zeugma • “You held your breath and the door for me.” ~Alanis Morissette “Head Over Feet” • “You are free to execute your laws, and your citizens, as you see fit.” ~Star Trek: Next Generation “He runs his mouth as much As his feet” ~Noah P.
Antithesis • Parallel structure that juxtaposes contrasting ideas • Antithesis of: • Words, • Phrases • Clauses (placement of two things side by side for emphasis)
Examples of Antithesis • Of WORDS “When distance runners reach the state they call the zone, they find themselves mentally engagedyet detached. • Of PHRASES “When distance runners reach the state they call the zone, they find themselves mentally engaged with their physical surroundingsyet detached from moment-to-moment concerns about their conditioning.”
Examples of Antithesis • Of CLAUSES “When distance runners reach the state they call the zone, they find that they are empiricallyengaged with their physical surroundingsyet they are also completelydetached from moment-to-moment concerns about their conditioning.”
Balance • Antimetabole (anti-met-ab-olee) • Words are repeated in different grammatical forms. • “When the going gets tough, the tough get going” • “Ask not what your country can do for you- ask what you can do for your country.” JFK • “You can take the girl out of the honky tonk, but you can’t take the honky tonk out of the girl.” Brooks and Dunn
Student Input: • “It’s not the size of the dog in the fight, it’s the size of the fight in the dog” • (Tyler A.) • “How much wood could a woodchuck chuck, if a woodchuck could chuck wood” • (James S.) • Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers, a peck of pickled peppers Peter Piper picked. If Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers, where’s the peck of pickled peppers Peter Piper picked? • (Bridget S. and Brandi B.)
Schemes Involving INTERRUPTION Necessary for on the spot information or ideas • Parenthesis (paren-the-ses) • an amplifying or explanatory word, phrase, or sentence inserted in a passage from which it is usually set off by punctuation “Sports night at the school always brings out the would-be jocks—whowould expect anydifferent?—ready to show that they’re potentially as good as the varsity players.
Interruption • Appositive • A word or phrase that renames the nearby noun or pronoun. “Joe Weider, a pioneer in personal weight training, would marvel at the facilities open to today’s student athletes.”
Omission • Purpose: • Gives the sentence rhythm is heightened and often accelerated and so the reader will pay close attention to the potentially dramatic effect of the prose.
Omission • Asyndeton (a-sin-da-ton) A writing style that omits conjunctions between words, phrases, or clauses “He has provided the poor with jobs, with opportunity, with self-respect.” No “and”
OMISSION • Polysyndeton • The deliberate use of many conjunctions between words, phrases, clauses • They read and studied and wrote and drilled. • I laughed and played and talked and flunked. • pg. 20 and 76 of The Glass Castle
Schemes Involving Repetition “Don’t be repetitive, but use repetition.” Purpose: Leads the reader to pay closer attention, to see the writer as purposeful, forceful, even artistic.
Alliteration- words following each other or close together that start with the same consonant sound “Intramural hockey is a strenuous, stimulating, satisfying sport.
Repetition Assonance (ass-o-nance) the repetition of identical or similar vowel sounds in the stressed syllables (and sometimes in the following unstressed syllables) of neighboring words “A workout partner is finally a kind, reliable, right-minded helper.”
Repetition Anaphora (ana-for-a) Deliberate repetition of words or phrases at the beginning of several successive verses, clauses, or paragraphs “Exercise builds stamina in young children, exercise builds stamina in teenagers and young adults, exercise builds stamina in older adults and senior citizens.
Schemes involving Repetition • Epistrophe (E-pis-tro-fee) • Repetition a word or expression at the end of successive phrases, clauses, sentences, or versus especially for rhetorical or poetic effect. To become a top-notch player, I thought like an athlete, I trained like an athlete, I ate like an athlete.
Repetition • Anadiplosis (ana-dip-lo-sis) • Repetition of the last words at one clause and the beginning of the next clause. Fear is the path to the dark side. Fear leads to anger. Anger leads to hate. Hate leads to suffering. ~(Yoda to Anakin Skywalker)
Repetition • Climax • Repetition of words, phrases, or clauses in order of increasing number or importance Excellent athletes need to be respectful of themselves, their teammates, their schools, and their communities.
Comparison • Purpose • Leads the reader to emphasize or downplay a particular topic and perhaps, achieve a better understanding
Comparison • Synecdoche Metaphor where the part stands for the whole: seems more literal We decided we could rearrange the gym equipment if everyone would lend a hand.
Comparison • Metonymy • A figure of speech in which one word or phrase is substituted for another with which it is closely associated at a deeper level • (“crown for royalty; “lend me your heart”) The central office announced today new regulations for sports nights.
Comparison • Personification: Giving human qualities to something that is not human The wind whispered through the pines.
Comparison • Periphrasis (puh-RI-frah-suhs) A trope in which one substitutes a descriptive word or phrase for a proper noun The New York Rangers and the New York Islanders vie to be the best hockey team in the Big Apple.
Schemes Involving Comparison • Metaphor: • A figure of speech that makes a direct comparison between two unlike things Many an athletic contest is lost when the player’s mind is an idling engine.
Comparison • Simile: To compare two unlike things using the connecting words like or as An athlete’s mind must be like a well-tuned engine, in gear and responding to the twists and curves of the contest. (This sentence begins w/ simile and ends with implied metaphor.)
Word Play • Purpose: • To attract reader’s attention
Tropes Involving Word Play • Pun • The use of similar sounding words to create an alternate meaning to the sentence in which they are used. When an actress saw her first strands of gray hair she thought she'd dye.
Word Play • Antimeria (anti-mer-ia) • One part of speech, usually a verb, that substitutes for a noun When the Little Leaguers lost the championship, they just needed to have a good cry before they could feel okay about their season.
Word Play • Onomatopoeia (ono-mato-pia) • A word that imitates or suggests the source of the sound that it describes. The puck whizzed and zipped over the ice, then clattered into the goal.
Word Play • Euphemism • Mild, indirect or vague term substituting for a harsh, blunt, or offensive terms • “passed away” vs. “died”
Overstatement and Understatement • Hyperbole (Hy-per-bowl-ee) • Also known as overstatement; exaggeration used to emphasize a point He couldn’t make that shot again if he tried a million times.
Overstatement and Understatement • Litotes (LYE-tuh-tees) • A particular form of understatement generated by denying the opposite of the word which would otherwise be used Shutting out the opponents for three straight games is no big deal (NBD) .
"Not bad." "[…] no ordinary city "She is not as young as she was." “Good” “[ ] a very impressive city. “She’s old.” Litotes Examples
Management of Meaning • Irony • The use of words to convey a meaning that is the opposite of its literal meaning Their center is over seven feet tall- where do they come up with these little pipsqueaks?
Management of Meaning • Sarcasm • A style of bitter irony intended to hurt or mock its target “Thanks for everything you did for us tonight” (when he really did nothing…).