Antonyms for rhetorical
Grammar : Adj |
Spell : ri-tawr-i-kuhl, -tor- |
Phonetic Transcription : rɪˈtɔr ɪ kəl, -ˈtɒr- |
Definition of rhetorical
Origin :- mid-15c., "eloquent," from Latin rhetoricus, from Greek rhetorikos "oratorical, rhetorical; skilled in speaking," from rhetor "orator" (see rhetoric). Meaning "pertaining to rhetoric" is from 1520s. Rhetorical question is from 1670s. Related: Rhetorically.
- adj wordy; flowery in speech
- The Menexenus has more the character of a rhetorical exercise than any other of the Platonic works.
- Extract from : « Menexenus » by Plato
- For I do not imagine that I have any rhetorical art of my own.
- Extract from : « Phaedrus » by Plato
- All of them are rhetorical and poetical rather than dialectical, but glimpses of truth appear in them.
- Extract from : « Symposium » by Plato
- Hardy was desperately in earnest, but not so much so as to be careless of rhetorical effect.
- Extract from : « Audrey Craven » by May Sinclair
- What Inflection is placed on the rhetorical questions in par.
- Extract from : « The Ontario High School Reader » by A.E. Marty
- It is no long step from this to the rhetorical question and its formal answer "ay but——."
- Extract from : « John Lyly » by John Dover Wilson
- The first of these is a peculiar use of the rhetorical interrogation.
- Extract from : « John Lyly » by John Dover Wilson
- His sense of decoration was fluid and had no hint of the rhetorical in it.
- Extract from : « Adventures in the Arts » by Marsden Hartley
- Mr. Mahaffy calls this “rhetorical consolation,” and the exiles may have been of his mind.
- Extract from : « Angling Sketches » by Andrew Lang
- Is there anything more in it than a name—a rhetorical flourish?
- Extract from : « Uncle Tom's Cabin » by Harriet Beecher Stowe
Synonyms for rhetorical
- articulate
- aureate
- bombastic
- declamatory
- eloquent
- embellished
- euphuistic
- exaggerated
- flamboyant
- flashy
- florid
- fluent
- glib
- grand
- grandiloquent
- grandiose
- high-flown
- hyperbolic
- imposing
- inflated
- magniloquent
- mouthy
- oratorical
- ornate
- ostentatious
- overblown
- overdone
- overwrought
- pompous
- pretentious
- showy
- silver-tongued
- sonorous
- stilted
- swollen
- tumescent
- tumid
- turgid
- verbose
- vocal
- voluble
- windy
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019