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Alphabetical [« »] spartan 1 spartans 1 speak 22 speaker 44 speakers 13 speaking 31 speaks 1 | Frequency [« »] 44 made 44 nature 44 qualities 44 speaker 44 used 43 anything 43 pain | Aristotle Rethoric IntraText - Concordances speaker |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 1 | may describe either the speaker’s knowledge of the art, 2 I, 2 | are not supplied by the speaker but are there at the outset-witnesses, 3 I, 2 | personal character of the speaker; the second on putting the 4 I, 2 | Persuasion is achieved by the speaker’s personal character when 5 I, 2 | be achieved by what the speaker says, not by what people 6 I, 2 | goodness revealed by the speaker contributes nothing to his 7 I, 2 | other instances known to the speaker are made into examples, 8 I, 3 | elements in speech-making—speaker, subject, and person addressed— 9 I, 3 | forensic, and the ceremonial speaker alike to be able to have 10 I, 4 | Means, then, the intending speaker will need to know the number 11 I, 4 | different races. The political speaker will also find the researches 12 I, 4 | information which the political speaker must possess. Let us now 13 I, 8 | ethical argument; it helps a speaker to convince us, if we believe 14 II, 1 | decide between one political speaker and another, and a legal 15 II, 20| invention of facts by the speaker. Of the latter, again, there 16 II, 20| take the following. The speaker may argue thus: "We must 17 II, 20| valuable for the political speaker to supply them by quoting 18 II, 21| occasions, and for what kind of speaker, they will appropriately 19 II, 21| handling subjects in which the speaker is experienced. For a young 20 II, 21| strong emotion—e.g. an angry speaker might well say, "It is not 21 II, 21| advantage of Maxims to a speaker is due to the want of intelligence 22 II, 21| sound, they display the speaker as a man of sound moral 23 II, 23| is to apply to the other speaker what he has said against 24 II, 23| by the solid advantage. A speaker will urge action by pointing 25 II, 24| thirty tyrants, where the speaker adds them up one by one. 26 II, 24| due to omission, since the speaker fails to say by whose hand 27 III, 1 | pitch, and rhythm-that a speaker bears in mind. It is those 28 III, 7 | not. Besides, an emotional speaker always makes his audience 29 III, 7 | that does this. If, then, a speaker uses the very words which 30 III, 7 | ignorance, and agrees with the speaker, so as to have a share of 31 III, 7 | well-worn device by which the speaker puts in some criticism of 32 III, 7 | excuse such language when the speaker has his hearers already 33 III, 9 | he is pulled back by the speaker’s stopping, the shock is 34 III, 10| people’s throat". The same speaker once urged the Athenians 35 III, 10| same grave." Even if the speaker here had only said that 36 III, 11| troubles. Either way, the speaker says something unexpected, 37 III, 11| does not suit an elderly speaker.~ 38 III, 12| wanted most, and here the speaker must have a good voice, 39 III, 14| They are concerned with the speaker, the hearer, the subject, 40 III, 14| hearer, the subject, or the speaker’s opponent. Those concerned 41 III, 14| Those concerned with the speaker himself or with his opponent 42 III, 16| doing what the political speaker, as such, has to do.~If 43 III, 17| court, if you are the first speaker you should put your own 44 III, 17| would Hera...~where the speaker has attacked the silliest