The benefit is that it persuades your audience more effectively to ask a question that they have already answered for themselves in their heads through your lead in to your rhetorical question. The audience will be more persuaded if they think of the answer "on their own" rather than just telling them what you think the answer to be.
a retorical question (I'm not sure if my spelling is correct. I think it is "rhetorical?)
please question to answer
I suppose, just ask Mitchell Bockmann?
prejudicial use of rhetorical devices?
A rhetorical writer uses questions to lead the reader to a pre-determined conclusion. A rhetorical writer does not state his purpose outright, and persuades the reader without doing so.
You can challenge the people to think by using a rhetorical question.
Yes, rhetorical statements makes a news more effective or good to hear.
If practice makes perfect, and nobody's perfect, than why practice?
A rhetorical question is a question which doesn't require an answer.
Rhetorical question
Rhetorical questions make the audience think about an answer to the question but no response is needed. This makes the reader think of all the possible answers, which then becomes memorable to them.
Rhetorical questions can be a effective way to emphasize a point or prompt the reader to think. It can also help engage the reader and make the answer more interesting and thought-provoking.
A rhetorical question.
a rhetorical question is a question that is not answeredso non-rhetorical would be the opposite. but everyone uses it wrong.
It is a RHETORICAL QUESTION. What makes a question rhetorical is that it is not asked as a question, but more as a fact, and does not require an answer. It is usually defined as any question asked for a purpose other than to obtain the information the question asks. * Example : "Why do you keep doing that?" It is commonly used as a persuasive element in a speech or text. * Example : "Does the government really care about the taxpayer?" Sometimes the question is open to an uninvited answer. * Example : "Do you take me for a fool?"
The term for answering a rhetorical question is "rhetorical assertion" or "rhetorical answer." It is used to make a point or emphasize a statement without expecting an actual response.
Is that a rhetorical question?