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Methods of Persuassion
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pathos : name used by aristotle for what modern students of communication refer to as emotional appeal
fear : serious illness, of natural disasters, of sexual assault, of personal rejection, of economic hardship
compassion : the physically disabled, for battered women, for neglected animals, for starving children, for victims with AIDS
pride : in one's country, in one's family, in one's school, in one's ethnic heritage, in one's personal accomplishments
Anger : at terrorists and their supporters, at business leaders who act unethically, at members of Congress who abuse the public trust, at landlords who exploit student tenants
Guilt : about not helping people less fortunate than ourselves, about not considering the rights of others, about not doing one's best
Reverence : for an admired person, for traditions and institutions, for one's deity
coldest : facts that can touch off an emotional response if they strike the right chords to the listener
vivid : richly textured examples that pull the listener into the speech
conviction and sincerity : strongest source of emotional power
Methods of Persuassion
Across:5. | in one's country, in one's family, in one's school, in one's ethnic heritage, in one's personal accomplishments | 7. | strongest source of emotional power |
| 9. | serious illness, of natural disasters, of sexual assault, of personal rejection, of economic hardship |
| | Down:1. | the physically disabled, for battered women, for neglected animals, for starving children, for victims with AIDS | 2. | facts that can touch off an emotional response if they strike the right chords to the listener | 3. | name used by aristotle for what modern students of communication refer to as emotional appeal | 4. | richly textured examples that pull the listener into the speech |
| 6. | about not helping people less fortunate than ourselves, about not considering the rights of others, about not doing one's best | 8. | at terrorists and their supporters, at business leaders who act unethically, at members of Congress who abuse the public trust, at landlords who exploit student tenants | 10. | for an admired person, for traditions and institutions, for one's deity |
| |
© 2014
PuzzleFast.com, Noncommercial Use Only
Methods of Persuassion
Across:5. | in one's country, in one's family, in one's school, in one's ethnic heritage, in one's personal accomplishments | 7. | strongest source of emotional power |
| 9. | serious illness, of natural disasters, of sexual assault, of personal rejection, of economic hardship |
| | Down:1. | the physically disabled, for battered women, for neglected animals, for starving children, for victims with AIDS | 2. | facts that can touch off an emotional response if they strike the right chords to the listener | 3. | name used by aristotle for what modern students of communication refer to as emotional appeal | 4. | richly textured examples that pull the listener into the speech |
| 6. | about not helping people less fortunate than ourselves, about not considering the rights of others, about not doing one's best | 8. | at terrorists and their supporters, at business leaders who act unethically, at members of Congress who abuse the public trust, at landlords who exploit student tenants | 10. | for an admired person, for traditions and institutions, for one's deity |
| |
© 2014
PuzzleFast.com, Noncommercial Use Only