rhetorical

అలంకారిక
definition
adjective
repetition is a common rhetorical device
of, relating to, or concerned with the art of rhetoric.
example
That is, the songs' 'rhetorical' strategies paralleled those of epideictic speeches.
The bottom line is that the party maintains a 'rhetorical' commitment to small government but tacitly admits that their cause is hopeless.
Imperialism is a term often used as a 'rhetorical' flourish and definitions vary especially in academic discourse and social discussion tracts.
The impression is of 'rhetorical' rings being run round Hamerton.
Don't worry, these are all 'rhetorical' questions.
I wasn't sure if this was a 'rhetorical' question or not.
Adding to the list of 'rhetorical' questions, why did the teenage daughter have such low standards for her boyfriend?
It presents an example of Chicana feminist rhetoric and an inroad to this 'rhetorical' tradition.
With previous Tory leaders, there was at least a 'rhetorical' commitment to a return on the investment through tax cuts.
That's a nice little 'rhetorical' trick, to pretend that the only possible omnivorous diet must be an unhealthy fast food one.
She can only be answered with more 'rhetorical' questions.
Before I even ask a 'rhetorical' question of how you feel about this, it has been such a joy to watch you come out here these past three weeks, and put your heart and soul into it.
Kyle didn't offer him the time to answer the rather 'rhetorical' question.
At minimum, the seller must establish enough of the attributes of attachment to establish the 'rhetorical' framework for persuasion.
Ovid's chiasmus is a 'rhetorical' picture of the lovers being pulled apart.
The poem avoids question marks not just because Merwin has eschewed all punctuation, but also because his questions are 'rhetorical' .
This isn't a 'rhetorical' question but one that, again, would help show whether they're applying this rule fairly or arbitrarily.
The word dignitas was a Latin 'rhetorical' and political term that indicated either the possession of high political or social rank or the moral qualities associated with it.
In mentioning the range of the 'rhetorical' lexicon we are not simply talking about lists of tropes and figures.
Once a commentator commits a major 'rhetorical' gaffe or colossal misstatement of fact, it becomes impossible to take them seriously.
The question I think that we're going to ask is, is this a 'rhetorical' commitment or is there something larger here?
Are their preferences driven less by political persuasions and by 'rhetorical' flourishes and more by the economic bottomline?
It should be made clear that India in this regard is a synecdoche (a term of 'rhetorical' analysis for a part which stands for the whole).
Unlike Goodman, he stopped short of action by private individuals, but this may have been a 'rhetorical' device.
A broad 'rhetorical' commitment to this ideal coexisted with stringent restrictions on speech deemed radical or obscene.
But, since the Doctor's question was obviously 'rhetorical' , I'm willing to let it slide.
This is an argument from the field of descriptive linguistics, made for a 'rhetorical' audience of laypeople.
But not overly strong on our sense of irony, if the 'rhetorical' bombast of this article is anything to go by.
The article is almost purely 'rhetorical' , with virtually nothing of substance offered in terms of legal arguments.
Rather he makes an antagonistic statement, couched as a 'rhetorical' question.
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