Arts or science of prose and poetry including rhetoric for any professional literary uses
From 1300 to 1350; <Latinrhētorica <Greekrhētorikt (art) Rhetoric (art); Instead of middle English <Medieval Latin rēthorica, Latin rhētorica, as stated above
Pretending to be speech or discourse is important, but it has no real meaning.
Early 14 C. , Old French Rhetoric, Latin Rhetoric, Greek Rhetoric Technique, Eloquist of Arts, Speaker of the Arts, Lecturer, Lecturer, Rhetoric Professor, and a language speech word "rhema" is a phrase, verb, 'Literally', 'from from PIE * wre-tor-, route * yes -'. (See "Old English words, Latin verbs, Greek eileen") "see" verbs)
Rhetoric also uses language as art. In some aspects of our lives, we have heard particularly eloquent speakers. The speaker speaks good words. Rhetoric also often includes what is called "rhetorical flower". These include inventions (techniques for discussing issues), schemes (rhetorical means of artistic patterns in sentence structure) and metaphor (rhetorical means including meaning transformation or word usage).
In the field of rhetoric, there is an ideological argument about the definition of Aristotle's rhetoric. Some think that Aristotle defines rhetoric rhetoric as persuasive art, others believe that he defines it as art of judgment. Rhetoric as an art of judgment means that rhetoric can identify persuasive means available through selection. Aristotle also said that rhetoric is related to judgment as the audience judges the spirit of rhetoric. One of the most famous doctrines of Aristotle's doctrine is the concept of the subject (also known as common theme or common theme). Although this term has a wide range of uses (for example, a combination of memory technology and exercises), it usually refers to "seat of discussion" (category list or inference pattern). Speakers can use generation parameters or proofs.