rhetor

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rhetor
rhetor (ˈriːtɔː(r)) Forms: 4–6 rethor, 5 rether, 5–6 -our, 6– rhetor. [a. L. rhētor (in med.L. often rethor), a. Gr. ῥήτωρ. Cf. F. rhéteur.] 1. A teacher or professor of rhetoric; a rhetorician.c 1375 St. Augustin 71 in Horstm. Altengl. Leg. (1878) 62/2 Austin þe doctour..was a philosofre and a reth... Oxford English Dictionary
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Zacharias Rhetor
The Chronicle of Pseudo-Zachariah Rhetor: Church and War in Late Antiquity. Ed. by G. Greatrex. Liverpool 2011. Die sogennante Kirchengeschichte des Zacharias Rhetor. Transl. by K. Ahrens & G. Krüger. Leipzig 1899. wikipedia.org
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Heracleides (rhetor)
Heracleides () was a rhetorician from Lycia, who lived and taught in Athens and Smyrna in the second century AD. Life Heracleides was a disciple of Herodes Atticus. We know him to have been a man of great skill, on whom was bestowed the imperial chair of rhetoric in Athens. There is a great deal of ... wikipedia.org
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rhetoriously
† rheˈtoriously, adv. Obs. In 5 reth-. [f. *rethorious (f. rhetor or rhetory + -ious) + -ly2.] With ‘colours’ of rhetoric.c 1475 Partenay 6611 Now ye all that shall thys..rede,..Remembreth myn unconnyng simplesse; Thought rethoriously peinted [it] be not in-dede,..yut excusith me. Oxford English Dictionary
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Menander Rhetor
Menander Rhetor (), also known as Menander of Laodicea (), was a Greek rhetorician and commentator of the 3rd or 4th century AD. Menander Rhetor. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1981. Text, translation and commentary. Ancient Greek rhetoricians wikipedia.org
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rethorie
rethor, rethoric, rethorie etc., obs. ff. rhetor, rhetoric, rhetory, etc. Oxford English Dictionary
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rhetory
† ˈrhetory Sc. Obs. Also 5–6 r(h)ethorie, retory. [ad. late L. *rethoria, *rhetoria, a. Gr. ῥητορεία, f. ῥήτωρ rhetor.] Rhetoric; eloquence.c 1480 Henryson Mor. Fab. Prol. 3 Thair polite termis of sweit Rhetorie [v.rr. rethorie, retory] Richt plesand ar vnto the eir of man. 1500–20 Dunbar Poems lxv.... Oxford English Dictionary
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Pseudo-Zacharias Rhetor
It contains portions of the otherwise lost Ecclesiastical History of the real Zacharias Rhetor. Further reading Full text The Syriac Chronicle of Zacharias Rhetor in Early Church Fathers. Edited by Hamilton and Brooks. wikipedia.org
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rhetorial
† rheˈtorial, a. Obs. rare—1. [f. rhetor or rhetory + -ial.] Rhetorical.1513 Bradshaw St. Werburge, Balade (1887) 201 O frutefull histore,..Enbawmed with doctrine of virtues infinite, With termes exquised and sence retoriall. Oxford English Dictionary
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Procatalepsis
This, in effect, creates a "straw man" against which the rhetor will then defend and strengthen his or her argument. Then, if the opponent does in fact bring up the argument that the rhetor anticipated, the rhetor appears to be correct not only in the subject matter of wikipedia.org
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Ludi magister
education was study under a grammaticus, and the third and final stage, only undertaken by young men from wealthy backgrounds, was instruction from a rhetor (the rhetor was almost always Greek and taught the art of public speaking). wikipedia.org
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Rhetorical situation
a correct character but does not correctly account for limits of a rhetor's ability. Taking after classical rhetoricians, he explains the topic as an instrument and a situation for the rhetor, allowing the rhetor to engage creatively with wikipedia.org
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加布里埃尔·哈维
Chandler, "Gabriel Harvey's Rhetor: A Translation and Critical Edition," dissertation, University of Missouri, 1978 Clarence A. wikipedia.org
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Invitational rhetoric
Equality: In contrast to the traditional rhetoric of persuasion, in which the rhetor is seen as superior to the audience, the rhetor and the audience are Value: Value is acknowledgment by the rhetor that the audience members have intrinsic worth. wikipedia.org
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Rhetorical criticism
Such an analysis, for example may reveal the particular motivations or ideologies of a rhetor, how he or she interprets the aspects of a rhetorical situation This involves the identification of the exigence, rhetor's constraints, audience, and the artifact's persuasive potential. wikipedia.org
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