The inaugural address has been characterized as a suasive message that presidents craft to establish their national leadership. |
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Character is one of the most important instructive and suasive devices in literature, Fowler points out. |
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In contrast, presidents' inaugural addresses have been described as suasive messages that are crafted to showcase the newly elected president as a national leader. |
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The inaugural address is regarded as an essentially suasive speech in which the president may articulate his vision of what the nation can and should be. |
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The climax is suasive, shatteringly beautiful, and absolutely right. |
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We can and must use our moral suasive power, use the tools that are at our fingertips to build a better, more peaceful world for all people. |
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We have proven through the land mines issue that we have the moral suasive power to do this. |
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About the best one can say for it is that it depends on substantial and moot principles of Aristotelian metaphysics, and, in any case, as a suasive argument, begs the question. |
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We are approaching an era in foreign policy when Canada can use its moral suasive power to lead other like-minded nations in developing a more peaceful world. |
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Suasive verbs imply intentions to bring about some change in the future. |
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