释义 |
Definition of rhetorician in English: rhetoriciannoun rɛtəˈrɪʃ(ə)nˌrɛdəˈrɪʃən 1An expert in formal rhetoric. 修辞学家 Example sentencesExamples - As rhetoricians with no one definition of rhetoric and no shared characterization of the writing whose teaching they would supervise, they would face the risk of intellectual chaos.
- In times of radical change, artists, rhetoricians, and critical intellectuals too often underestimate our importance and our powers.
- Such work is likely to be outside the home unit's understanding of rhetoric, which will require educating colleagues who are not rhetoricians.
- I'm interested that over the years, the people who have invited us into their classrooms to see how they teach and talk most intelligently about teaching are not the rhetoricians.
- As rhetoricians, we generally take as a starting point that rhetoric involves action.
- Olson, Richard McKeon, and Ronald Crane put hundreds of graduate students at least on speaking terms with classical rhetoric, and rhetoricians were active in the Hutchins college as well.
- Coupland the slaphappy rhetorician, drunk on throwaway tropes and instant epigrams, puts Coupland the pop sociologist in the shade.
- It's plain silly to compartmentalize the disciplines, as if a botanist couldn't talk to an economist, a geologist to a rhetorician, or N. A. Chomsky to G. W. Bush.
- In short, Lacanian psychoanalytic theory can help rhetoricians navigate the posthumanist theoretical landscape in a characteristically rhetorical way.
- Numerous rhetoricians have also considered how rhetorical space is created and how it includes and excludes certain discourse, and certain speakers.
- As rhetoricians, we understand the strategic power of attending to practical resources of particular situations, and a rhetorical stance on rhetorical studies needs to put that understanding to use.
- A distinguished cast of classical Greek and Roman rhetoricians differed fundamentally on the tasks of rhetoric and the evidence of their disputes is conveniently collected in Quintilian.
- Including the term ‘rhetoric,’ we rhetoricians argued, would help to both demystify the term and avoid giving the impression that the option was a sort of vocational track.
- The senses of rhetoric deployed here are quite narrow, invoking what ancient rhetoricians would have thought of as the third and fifth canons of rhetoric respectively.
- A rhetorician could note figures and tropes throughout the play.
- At the meeting of the Rhetoric Society of America in 2000 a group of rhetoricians from Communication and English met late one afternoon to consider the future of rhetoric as an academic discipline.
- If rhetoricians are the approved practitioners of rhetoric, they can expand their territory by an expansive definition.
- To the extent that Hoppin influenced Robinson, he would have accorded classical rhetoric primary importance and singled out Quintilian as the rhetorician deserving the highest praise.
- This department would bring together the twelve to fifteen scholars of composition/rhetoric in English with the four to six rhetoricians from communications.
- To say that the drama often emphasizes the dark side of rhetoric is certainly true, but to argue that Renaissance rhetoricians were unaware of that side is simply to ignore a great deal of evidence to the contrary.
- 1.1 A speaker whose words are primarily intended to impress or persuade.
工于辞令的说空话者;说话浮夸者 they're ready to listen to any smooth-tongued rhetorician Example sentencesExamples - Again, the image-based rhetorician has a competitive advantage over the concept-based rhetorician: imagery produces superior memory for verbal material.
- By contrast, the new abolitionist calls are being issued primarily by rhetoricians in the field who consider, in Young's words, art as grammar.
- But in the hands of the party's rhetoricians, such trite sentiments are intended to catch votes, not to express real policies.
- Hence the rhetorician who wants to persuade by arguments or proofs can adapt most of the dialectical equipment.
- Although Hairston, Young, Becker and Pike take for granted that Rogers' theories are appropriate for use by rhetoricians as a means to persuade, this is not the case.
- Campbell's manner is refined and thoughtful; he is not a forceful lecturer, but a measured and methodical rhetorician.
- Wright begins with the note commonly sounded by rhetoricians: the orator must first feel the passion he wishes to ‘imprint’ in his audience.
- From a critical perspective, Juanita's awareness that her work could be ‘dismissed as bogus’ because of particular language choices is an important factor in her development as a rhetorician.
- The moralizing is given all the force which an accomplished rhetorician can provide and is enlivened by anecdote, hyperbole, and vigorous denunciation.
Synonyms speech-maker, public speaker, lecturer, talker, speechifier, expounder, orator, declaimer, haranguer
OriginLate Middle English: from Old French rethoricien, from rhetorique (see rhetoric). Rhymesacademician, addition, aesthetician (US esthetician), ambition, audition, beautician, clinician, coition, cosmetician, diagnostician, dialectician, dietitian, Domitian, edition, electrician, emission, fission, fruition, Hermitian, ignition, linguistician, logician, magician, mathematician, Mauritian, mechanician, metaphysician, mission, monition, mortician, munition, musician, obstetrician, omission, optician, paediatrician (US pediatrician), patrician, petition, Phoenician, physician, politician, position, sedition, statistician, suspicion, tactician, technician, theoretician, Titian, tuition, volition Definition of rhetorician in US English: rhetoriciannounˌredəˈriSHənˌrɛdəˈrɪʃən 1An expert in formal rhetoric. 修辞学家 Example sentencesExamples - The senses of rhetoric deployed here are quite narrow, invoking what ancient rhetoricians would have thought of as the third and fifth canons of rhetoric respectively.
- Coupland the slaphappy rhetorician, drunk on throwaway tropes and instant epigrams, puts Coupland the pop sociologist in the shade.
- Numerous rhetoricians have also considered how rhetorical space is created and how it includes and excludes certain discourse, and certain speakers.
- In times of radical change, artists, rhetoricians, and critical intellectuals too often underestimate our importance and our powers.
- A rhetorician could note figures and tropes throughout the play.
- As rhetoricians, we understand the strategic power of attending to practical resources of particular situations, and a rhetorical stance on rhetorical studies needs to put that understanding to use.
- This department would bring together the twelve to fifteen scholars of composition/rhetoric in English with the four to six rhetoricians from communications.
- It's plain silly to compartmentalize the disciplines, as if a botanist couldn't talk to an economist, a geologist to a rhetorician, or N. A. Chomsky to G. W. Bush.
- To say that the drama often emphasizes the dark side of rhetoric is certainly true, but to argue that Renaissance rhetoricians were unaware of that side is simply to ignore a great deal of evidence to the contrary.
- I'm interested that over the years, the people who have invited us into their classrooms to see how they teach and talk most intelligently about teaching are not the rhetoricians.
- As rhetoricians with no one definition of rhetoric and no shared characterization of the writing whose teaching they would supervise, they would face the risk of intellectual chaos.
- In short, Lacanian psychoanalytic theory can help rhetoricians navigate the posthumanist theoretical landscape in a characteristically rhetorical way.
- Such work is likely to be outside the home unit's understanding of rhetoric, which will require educating colleagues who are not rhetoricians.
- Olson, Richard McKeon, and Ronald Crane put hundreds of graduate students at least on speaking terms with classical rhetoric, and rhetoricians were active in the Hutchins college as well.
- As rhetoricians, we generally take as a starting point that rhetoric involves action.
- A distinguished cast of classical Greek and Roman rhetoricians differed fundamentally on the tasks of rhetoric and the evidence of their disputes is conveniently collected in Quintilian.
- At the meeting of the Rhetoric Society of America in 2000 a group of rhetoricians from Communication and English met late one afternoon to consider the future of rhetoric as an academic discipline.
- To the extent that Hoppin influenced Robinson, he would have accorded classical rhetoric primary importance and singled out Quintilian as the rhetorician deserving the highest praise.
- If rhetoricians are the approved practitioners of rhetoric, they can expand their territory by an expansive definition.
- Including the term ‘rhetoric,’ we rhetoricians argued, would help to both demystify the term and avoid giving the impression that the option was a sort of vocational track.
- 1.1 A speaker whose words are primarily intended to impress or persuade.
工于辞令的说空话者;说话浮夸者 they're ready to listen to any smooth-tongued rhetorician Example sentencesExamples - The moralizing is given all the force which an accomplished rhetorician can provide and is enlivened by anecdote, hyperbole, and vigorous denunciation.
- Campbell's manner is refined and thoughtful; he is not a forceful lecturer, but a measured and methodical rhetorician.
- From a critical perspective, Juanita's awareness that her work could be ‘dismissed as bogus’ because of particular language choices is an important factor in her development as a rhetorician.
- Although Hairston, Young, Becker and Pike take for granted that Rogers' theories are appropriate for use by rhetoricians as a means to persuade, this is not the case.
- Wright begins with the note commonly sounded by rhetoricians: the orator must first feel the passion he wishes to ‘imprint’ in his audience.
- Again, the image-based rhetorician has a competitive advantage over the concept-based rhetorician: imagery produces superior memory for verbal material.
- But in the hands of the party's rhetoricians, such trite sentiments are intended to catch votes, not to express real policies.
- By contrast, the new abolitionist calls are being issued primarily by rhetoricians in the field who consider, in Young's words, art as grammar.
- Hence the rhetorician who wants to persuade by arguments or proofs can adapt most of the dialectical equipment.
Synonyms speech-maker, public speaker, lecturer, talker, speechifier, expounder, orator, declaimer, haranguer
OriginLate Middle English: from Old French rethoricien, from rhetorique (see rhetoric). |