The Practical Elements of Rhetoric: With Illustrative Examples 1887 |
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Page 280
... Conclusion to the Body of Discourse . - While the body of discourse has tended to diversity , following as it did the radiations of the thought into its various divisions and aspects , the conclusion , like the introduction , works to a ...
... Conclusion to the Body of Discourse . - While the body of discourse has tended to diversity , following as it did the radiations of the thought into its various divisions and aspects , the conclusion , like the introduction , works to a ...
Page 424
... conclusion , which draws the inference apparent in the relation of the two premises . To illustrate by an example : - Major premise : All men are mortal . Minor premise : Augustus is a man . Conclusion : Therefore , Augustus is mortal ...
... conclusion , which draws the inference apparent in the relation of the two premises . To illustrate by an example : - Major premise : All men are mortal . Minor premise : Augustus is a man . Conclusion : Therefore , Augustus is mortal ...
Page 428
... conclusion is then taken as the premise of a second , and the conclusion of this for a third , and so on through a succes . sion of steps , to a final supreme conclusion . Such a chain of reasoning , involving as it does the thorough ...
... conclusion is then taken as the premise of a second , and the conclusion of this for a third , and so on through a succes . sion of steps , to a final supreme conclusion . Such a chain of reasoning , involving as it does the thorough ...
Contents
Definition of Rhetoric | 1 |
Style in General | 13 |
Diction | 27 |
Copyright | |
29 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
The Practical Elements of Rhetoric; with Illustrative Examples John Franklin Genung No preview available - 2013 |
The Practical Elements of Rhetoric: With Illustrative Examples John Franklin Genung No preview available - 2018 |
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according already application argument become beginning better called cause character clause clearness conclusion connected construction course definite depends determined direct discourse distinction effect elements employed English especially essay example expression fact feeling figure force give given habit hand head idea illustrate imagination important indicated instance interest introduction invention kind language laws leading less literary literature look manner material means merely mind nature needs never NOTE object observed occasion once paragraph particular passage perhaps person poetry preceding present principle produce prose question reader reason reference regarded relation requires Rhetoric rule seen sense sentence significance sometimes sound speech statement structure style suggestion taken theme things thought tion true truth whole words writer