A demagogue.
The speaker may use appeals to emotion by eliciting strong feelings in the audience to persuade them. Appeals to logic and common sense involve presenting facts and reasoning to support their argument. Appeals to authority and moral character rely on the credibility and ethical standing of the speaker to persuade the audience.
Speakers use appeals to persuade their audience by appealing to emotions, logic, or credibility. Emotion appeals engage the audience's feelings, logic appeals use reasoning and evidence, and credibility appeals establish the speaker's authority or trustworthiness.
Ethos appeals to an audience's sense of credibility and trustworthiness. It is particularly effective with audiences who value authority, expertise, and integrity in the speaker or source of information.
hope
feelings
Ethos, Pathos, and Logos are rhetorical appeals used to persuade an audience in an argument. Ethos refers to credibility and expertise of the speaker, Pathos is appeal to emotions, and Logos is appeal to logic and reasoning. Each plays a role in convincing an audience to agree with a particular point of view.
A speaker can provoke emotion in an audience by using powerful storytelling, incorporating personal anecdotes, using evocative language and imagery, and engaging with passion and authenticity. By appealing to the audience's senses and tapping into universal human experiences, a speaker can effectively connect with their emotions.
The speaker first greeted the raven with curiosity. Then the speaker laughed at how the raven looked so serious and dignified considering that it is just a bird.
Rhetoric refers to the speaker's use of emotion, logic, and ethics to influence an audience. This involves the art of persuasive speaking and writing to effectively communicate ideas.
love for and happiness with her husband.
Because 'hate' is a 'cold' emotion.
Aristotle believed using ethos (credibility), pathos (emotion), and logos (logic) in persuasive communication helps establish trust with the audience, appeals to their emotions, and presents a logical argument to persuade them effectively. By incorporating all three elements, a speaker can connect with their audience on multiple levels and increase the chances of their message being accepted and understood.