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Persuasive Techniques by Reham, Moesha, Joshika, Shavaiz, Adam, Zahra,…
Persuasive Techniques by Reham, Moesha, Joshika, Shavaiz, Adam, Zahra, Abdul, Sakina and Moaz.
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Using different literary devices for writing such as personification, similes, strong metaphors, alliteration and onomatopoeia and more.
Ask rhetorical questions. This helps people reflect on what could be affected by that certain topic, and what is their stance on that topic.
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Another way of captivating your reader is to use your five senses and to be able to enhance your writing piece by using strong adjectives which provide emphasis, and literacy devices.
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Providing pros about that topic can also help quite a lot and if that topic negatively affects, and your main point is to make them stop doing that certain thing, you can provide the pros and cons of that. For example, if you want to persuade people to not smoke, provide them what happens when you smoke, and then tell them what happens when you don't smoke and how smoking can ruin their lives along with their family's lives.
should not be that long so the one you are trying to convince does not get bored and refuse what you say
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Add statistical examples or frequencies of how much you need to emphasize on that particular topic. Example - Humor & Sarcasm:45% etc..
Ethos, Pathos, Logos
Pathos: Emotions / Values. With pathos, you make the audience feel so you include stories, inspirational quotes, and vivid language.
Ethos is related to trustworthiness and respect and that can attract the audience a lot. It will make the audience respect you and think what your saying is true. It is also one of the best persuasive techniques.
Trust, Feel, Think. Gain their trust by making connections and by enhancing your bond between you and your audience. Make them feel about future consequences if they agree to what you say, and what are the cons if they don't agree with you and emotionally attack them. Make them think about the logical reasoning behind your points. Argue with your facts and try your best to make your audience think.
Pathos: Adding or expressing emotion or feeling and making your audience comfortable with you and what you're talking about.
Logos: Logos is a persuasive technique that aims to convince an audience by using logic and reason. Also called "logical appeal" logos examples in advertisement include the citation of statistics, facts, charts, and graphs.
Expert opinion: Normally, the audience believes only what substantial or influential people say, and the credibility of whatever they are saying would be higher than if you hear someone unknown say the same thing. This is called expert opinion, and is being used in most persuasive ads and speeches.