But in the hands of the party's rhetoricians, such trite sentiments are intended to catch votes, not to express real policies. |
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Such work is likely to be outside the home unit's understanding of rhetoric, which will require educating colleagues who are not rhetoricians. |
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As rhetoricians, we generally take as a starting point that rhetoric involves action. |
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If rhetoricians are the approved practitioners of rhetoric, they can expand their territory by an expansive definition. |
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By contrast, the new abolitionist calls are being issued primarily by rhetoricians in the field who consider, in Young's words, art as grammar. |
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In times of radical change, artists, rhetoricians, and critical intellectuals too often underestimate our importance and our powers. |
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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. |
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In short, Lacanian psychoanalytic theory can help rhetoricians navigate the posthumanist theoretical landscape in a characteristically rhetorical way. |
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Numerous rhetoricians have also considered how rhetorical space is created and how it includes and excludes certain discourse, and certain speakers. |
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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. |
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The five paragraph theme is probably still the dominant model, even though it is politely dismissed by compositionist and rhetoricians. |
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The apparent simplicity of the vachanas does not imply that they are not recognised by rhetoricians. |
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First, there is palilogia, which is an idiosyncrasy of certain rhetoricians and public speakers who deliberately repeat a word or phrase or sentence for the sake of emphasis. |
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