Rhetoric
Rhetoric Midterm

In the text box, enter your question (label it QUESTION, in all caps) and directly beneath it your answer (ANSWER in all caps). Be sure to include your name in your post.

As a guide to the kinds of questions I'm looking for, use the 30 midterm review questions posted on the EXAMS page of the course website. As an alternative to writing out an answer, you can refer us to a particular page in one of our textbooks or a page (provide URL) on our course website. You may post as many questions and answers as you like up until the evening of the midterm exam. However, I will have finished making up the exam by Sunday night, October 21, so if you'd like to see your question considered for the exam, post it by Sunday evening. I can't promise that I'll use your question (or even a version of it), but the review should be helpful in any case. Each evening I'll check the postings on the forum and correct or delete any misinformation that I might find there. Posting questions and answers isn't a requirement, but there's not a single good reason not to post at least one Q & A.



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Subject:   midterm
Name:   brittny magulias
Date Posted:   Mar 13, 08 - 3:17 PM
Email:   bmaguli@comcast.net
Message:   What are the types of arguments?

1. External – (witnesses, dispositions under torture, contracts laws, oaths). The external arguments (sometimes called non‑artistic proofs) are not part of the art of rhetoric. They are persuasive in and of themselves.

2. Internal – arguments that must be found or discovered. Internal arguments (sometimes called artistic proofs) require an art by which they may be found.
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Re: midterm by Nordquist · Mar 14, 08 - 1:43 AM


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