The sentence provided appears to use descriptive rhetoric, as it is providing information about a specific topic without attempting to persuade or influence the audience's emotions or beliefs.
The theater is the place where epideictic rhetoric belongs.
In the sentence, "yet" is a coordinating conjunction.
To determine the type of conjunction used in a sentence, you need to identify the specific conjunction in question (e.g., coordinating conjunctions, subordinating conjunctions, correlative conjunctions) and then analyze how it connects the words or phrases in the sentence.
An incomplete sentence, also referred to as a fragment, is any sentence without a subject and/or predicate.I ran.I'll go.Run!While all three of these sentences are short, they are complete sentences. Run! is a command, with the subject ('you') implied.I --> subjectran --> predicate, verb.I --> subjectwill go --> predicate, with helping verb (will) and main verb (go).Fragmented sentences can be a very powerful tool in rhetoric and prose, if used sparingly.
His nationalist rhetoric underscored his analysis of the hockey game; he suggested that Canada was superior to the U.S., not only in matters of hockey, but in every conceivable way.
Logos
Please provide the statement you're referring to in order for me to identify the type of rhetoric being used.
His rhetoric is persuasive.
His speech was dismissed as mere rhetoric by the opposition.
Yes, rhetoric is a type of evocative or persuasive speech.
The theater is the place where epideictic rhetoric belongs.
Type your answer here.. Rhetoric.
"His high sounding rhetoric boiled down to little more than the premise that as he wanted it, it was his by right."
Logos
Rhetoric is a tool that can be used for both constructive and manipulative purposes. It can be used to persuade and inspire audiences, but it can also be used to deceive and manipulate. The ethical nature of rhetoric depends on how it is used and the intentions behind its use.
If you mean how to use the word 'rhetoric' in a sentence, you could say 'His words were just empty rhetoric,' meaning he was just full of hot air and no substance. If you mean how to use a rhetorical device (or figure of speech) in a sentence, a good example is JFK's famous line, "And so my fellow Americans, ask not what your country can do for you - ask what you can do for your country.' This is a device called Chiasmus, where the words in one phrase or clause are reversed in the next, i.e 'country ... you' becomes 'you ... country.'
Pathos only