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Loaded Language. Loaded Language is emotional language Can be single words or phrases The writer uses it to make the reader feel something- Anger, sadness, joy, injustice, fear, horror, etc.
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Loaded Language • Loaded Language is emotional language • Can be single words or phrases • The writer uses it to make the reader feel something- • Anger, sadness, joy, injustice, fear, horror, etc. • Persuasive writing often appeals to readers emotionally (pathos) using loaded language as a rhetorical tool.
ISN- Read this story, and record examples of words/phrases you hear that are “loaded language.” EDITORIAL The Capital’s Kitchen Published: January 15, 2012 For 23 years, D.C. Central Kitchen, the country’s oldest community kitchen providing meals for the poor and homeless, has taken discarded food and marginalized people and found value in both. It’s a nonprofit that gives new meaning to free enterprise. What started with one refrigerator truck has grown into an organization that provides about 5,000 meals a day to homeless shelters, halfway houses and other sites in Washington. Half the staff members are ex-convicts, former addicts or onetime homeless people, who finished the group’s training program and are now prized employees. In 2008, as the economy slid into a downturn, the kitchen employed 60 people and its annual budget was $7.4 million. Today, with the economy still struggling, the staff is twice as big and its budget has grown by almost 50 percent to over $10 million. “This {outbreak of swine flu} is obviously a cause for concern and requires a heightened state of alert. But it is not a cause for alarm. The US Department of Health & Human Services declared a public health emergency as a precautionary tool to ensure we have the resources we need at our disposal to respond quickly and effectively.” – President Obama: press conference in April 2009
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3032619/#46017442 “Around here the word is ‘Get inland and get there fast.’” – ABC news reporter “There may be power shortages, water shortages. Be prepared.” – Lyda Ann Thomas, Galveston Mayor ISN- watch this video- record examples of words/phrases you hear that are “loaded language.”
“The Gettysburg Address” “Galveston is a dangerous and dysfunctional city nowhere near ready to sustain normal life.” – ABC news reporter “The homes have been flooded. They have no power, no gas and it will be a long time before they will.” – Steve Leblanc, City Mayor Highlight examples of loaded language used in Lincoln’s speech.