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The audience may not trust the speaker.
The relationship between the speaker, the speaker's style of address, and the audience's expectations
The relationship between the speaker, the speaker's style of address, and the audience's expectations
The relationship between the speaker, the speaker's style of address, and the audience's expectations
A great speech is appropriate for the audience. It affects the audience in a positive way. It must be relevant to the audience. It must interest the audience. It must have value for the audience. The audience is individually and collectively paying a price to hear the speech. They are giving up time out of their lives. If the speech is boring, unintelligible, irrelevant, or lacks value, they cannot get a refund. The time they have spent is gone forever. Therefore, a speaker must always have their audience in mind as they prepare their speech. The speaker owes the audience a great speech with as much value as possible. The speaker must speak with enthusiasm, passion, and commitment, regardless of the topic. A great speaker speaks as though their words are the most important things the audience could possibly hear at that moment.
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When asking about the purpose of a speaker and the audience of a text, you're asking what the purpose of the speech is.
Subject occasion audience purpose (style)
communication
The rhetorical situation
speaker occasion audience purpose subject
it is likely that the audience will distrust the speaker.
The rhetorical situation
CONTEXT
To tell the audience that the speaker is moving on to a different point. This can be verbal or non verbal.
it is likely that the audience will distrust the speaker.
subject. occasion. author/audience. purpose. speaker. tone. orginizatin/ narrative style. evidence