Year 9 Persuasive Language Devices used in Opinion Pieces‚ Editorials and Letters to the Editor Persuasive Device Example The intended effect on the reader Emotive language & connotations ‘These young offenders...’ (positive) ‘These thugs...’ (negative) This type of language is intended to have a strong impact on readers as it is more appealing to their emotions than their intellects. It is designed to position the reader to see something in a positive or negative light. Anecdotal evidence
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English Essay – Conflict Conflict is a destructive force that makes victims of the innocent. Conflict is a destructive force that makes victims of the innocent. Not only those causing the conflict are harmed but also those exposed to it through friendships‚ loyalties‚ relations‚ families and communities and can be made victims. William Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet (1595) successfully addresses the consequences conflict can have on innocent people‚ it is a main theme which builds tension and leads
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Does Edson’s W;t enhance or trivalise a study of Donne? Support your view by referring to your TWO prescribed texts in detail. Edson uses many different characters‚ in particular the protagonist‚ Vivian Bearing‚ to conceptualise ideas of Donne poems. This is by drawing relations from Donne’s poetry and Vivian’s life events such as through job prospects as well as relational and death issues encountered. This is then use in order to trivalise the study of Donne but drawing different meanings from
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THE ART OF PERSUASION: RHETORICAL TECHNIQUES 1. Colloquial language – e.g. ‘She’s a top sheila that Jessica Rowe. Channel Nine are stark raving bonkers to give her the boot’. This language is used to appear inclusive or ‘on the inside’ of a particular social or cultural group. It could reinforce a sense of cultural identity between the reader and the writer. It could also be used sarcastically‚ to ridicule the attitudes or language of an opponent - e.g. ’I’m sure Ms Gillard thinks it’s ’right on’
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Wizard of Oz Interpretation The Wonderful Wizard of Oz is a story about a girl named Dorothy who experiences a cyclone that takes her to a magical land of good and bad. When she is in this land she encounters a Scarecrow‚ Tin Man‚ and a Lion. These 3 characters are with her throughout the story and they go through different tough situations together. In the end they make their way to the Oz who grants their wishes and Dorothy goes back home. People say that this story is based off of populism‚ money
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Influence is the capacity or power of persons to produce an effect on the actions of others. Victor Flemming‚ the director of the 1939 film The Wizard of Oz‚ depicts a message that revolves around the reversal of power and gender roles. Moreover‚ Dorothy is a child in her physical presence but lives the role of a hero as she leads the scarecrow‚ lion‚ and tin man to the Wizard himself. Through the archetypes such as the hero being a women‚ Cultural values‚ and the stages of the journey‚ Flemming
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Alliteration: The headline employs alliteration through the repetition of the letter ‘P’ in order to engage the reader as well as hold his attention. Allusion: The writer eludes to the horrors of the Holocaust in the hope of evoking a visceral response that will encourage support for the current Iraq War. Analogy The writer employs the analogy of cancer. In doing so‚ he likens gambling to the infamous malignant tumour as to suggest the devastating effects of gambling on the health of
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The Wizard of Oz Review by Harvey Karten Copyright © 1998 Harvey Karten I’d like five bucks for every time someone called out to me‚ “Hey‚ Toto!” when I walk my cairn terrier around the neighborhood. “Is that really Toto?” adults would stop and ask me‚ and I’d of course reply‚ “Sure it is; I’ve had him for sixty-three years now.” As for the kids‚ well‚ surprisingly enough some of them never saw “The Wizard of Oz” so the best they can do is say‚ “Ma‚ Ma‚ look at the dog!” Pretty soon
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Fo-shizzle-ism is our generations tendency to hand out fame to random undeserving‚ talentless people who haven’t earned it. Just because someone does something stupid or acts crazy enough for the world to take notice‚ doesn’t mean they deserve to be famous. A prime example of fo-schizzle-ism is the rapper snoop dog‚ who was the inventor of the term “fo shizzle”‚ earning himself his own part of the American cultural history just by coining a catchy phrase that happened to go viral. As of right now
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hat‚ and a staff is portrayed as good and bad instead of just bad like how witches are portrayed. When a fantasy book is read or when a movie comes on‚ take notice how often the good wizard comes on as compared to a witch. In the movie‚ The Wizard of Oz there is a good witch and a bad witch. When Dorothy meets Glinda the Good Witch‚ Glinda merely tells Dorothy where she needs to go
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