Use LEFT and RIGHT arrow keys to navigate between flashcards;
Use UP and DOWN arrow keys to flip the card;
H to show hint;
A reads text to speech;
23 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
1660-1800
|
Restoration period
|
|
beheaded after English civil war
|
Charles I
|
|
becomes ruler after Charles I
|
Oliver Cromwell
|
|
Oliver Cromwell
|
strict puritan rule, no theatre or respect for arts
|
|
The Haves
|
strongly influenced by the French and enjoyed bright flaboyant clothing
|
|
The Have Nots
|
death rate higher than birth rate, young children forced to work, crowded tenements
|
|
Restoration
|
also called age of enlightenment, age of reason
|
|
deism
|
creator sets world in motion,lets it run by itself
|
|
elegy
|
written for a person who died (mourning)
|
|
Satire
|
ridicules person or behavior
|
|
ode
|
written for public occasions
|
|
logical appeal
|
uses facts/statistics to support their position
|
|
emotional appeals
|
uses words that arouse strong feelings
|
|
ethical appeals
|
establish the writer’s sincerity and qualifications
|
|
an imitation of the style of a particular writer, artist, or genre with deliberate exaggeration for comic effect
|
parody
|
|
are methods writers or speakers use to make their language more effective or to reinforce a particular point
|
rhetorical device
|
|
the writer, for effect, asks a question for which an answer is not expected--usually because the writer expects that the audience will agree with the opinion being expressed
|
rhetorical question
|
|
argument by analogy
|
the writer point out a parallel between two subjects or situations in order to make a point
|
|
the writer cites a person, a place, or an event from history that relates to the topic at hand
|
historical allusion
|
|
the writer repeats the main idea in different ways
|
repetition or restatement
|
|
the writer anticipates the audience’s objections or concerns and openly addresses them
|
counterargument
|
|
the writer cites the opinions of experts on the subject
|
appeal to authority
|
|
the writer uses a brief story or cites a particular case in order to support his or her point
|
illustrative anecdote or example
|