AP Lang Vocab 101-120 Flashcards
shows that the writer is a logical and fair-minded person, able to consider before it is presented. This type of writing can be considered strong as it finds common ground between you and your opponent.
concession-part 2
A literary device in which two or more words are joined together to coin a new word. This word is formed by blending parts of 2 or more words but it always refers to a single concept.
portmanteau
involves linking and blending of 2 or more words and the new word formed in the process shares the same meaning as the original words. different from a compound word. EX: medical+ care= Medicare
education+ entertainment= edutainment
the coinage of portmanteau
understatement, esp. that in which an affirmative is expressed by the negative of its contrary “not bad at all”
litotes
Rhetorical reversal of the order of words in the second of 2 parallel phrases: he came in triumph and in defeat departs: He went to the country, to the town went he
chiasmus
rhetorical term for the repetition of the last word of one line or clause to begin the next. EX: Fear leads to anger. Anger leads to hate. Hate leads to suffering. I sense much fear in you.
anadiplosis
a verbally abusive attack
invective
the use of an unnecessarily large number of words or an indirect means of expression to express an idea so as to effect an evasion in speech.
circumlocution
supporting a claim with a reason that is really a restatement of the claim in a different wording.
begging the question
A saying or proverb embodying a piece of common wisdom based on experience and often couched in metaphorical language(ex: It is always darkest before the dawn.)
adage
Similar to truth; the quality of realism in a work that persuades the reader that he/she is getting a vision of life as it is.
verisimilitude
A confused, comically inaccurate use of a long word or words. EX: In Romeo and Juliet that nurse says “I desire some confidence with you sir.”
malapropism
The rising and falling rhythm of speech especially in free verse or prose
cadence
Error in assuming that because two things are alike in some ways, they are alike in all ways
false analogy
Unsound inductive inference based on insufficient, inadequate, unspecific evidence
hasty generalization