Dave Bricker: Want to expand your speaking and storytelling skills and grow your influence? This is Speakipedia Media brought to…
Catachresis is a bold, often startling use of language where a word is used in a way that dramatically changes…
Transcript Dave Bricker (00:03) Want to expand your speaking and storytelling skills and grow your influence business? This is Speakipedia…
by Dave Bricker Load a demo and experience the AI-generated results. Get Started Opening Prompt Intro Call to Action Pitch!…
Nothing screams “amateur” like a poorly crafted book cover. The standards for book design aspired to by trade publishers are…
Adynaton. Pronounced ad-uh-NAY-ton, is a form of hyperbole that describes something so exaggerated, it's impossible. It's like saying, 'You'll get…
Antimetabole—pronounced an-ti-muh-TAB-uh-lee—involves repeating words in successive clauses, but in reversed order. Listen to Winston S. Churchill’s famous example: 'This is…
Chiasmus, pronounced ky-AZ-mus. Chiasmus is a rhetorical device in which two or more clauses are balanced against each other by…
Catechresis is a bold, often startling use of language where a word is used in a way that dramatically changes…
Euphony refers to the quality of being pleasing to the ear, especially through a harmonious combination of words. It's a…
Epistrophe is used to emphasize a point and create a memorable rhythm in speech. A classic example comes from Abraham…
Climax. Yeah, we all know what that is … but in the context of storytelling and public speaking, a climax…
Alliteration. Alliteration artfully arranges adjacent and alike initial sounds in closely clustered words. It’s a superb stylistic strategy that stitches…
Hyperbole—an exaggerated statement or claim not meant to be taken literally but used to grab attention, emphasize a point, or…
Malapropism—the misuse of a word by confusing it with a similar-sounding word, resulting in nonsensical, often bituminous statements. A classic…
Orotund refers to a style of speech that is rounded, full, and imposing. It describes a voice or tone that…
Oxymoron—a figure of speech in which contradictory terms appear in conjunction. It's used to create a dramatic effect or to…
An Aphorism is a pithy observation that contains a general truth, such as, ‘Actions speak louder than words.' These short,…
Peroration refers to the concluding part of a speech, designed to inspire enthusiasm and drive home the speaker's key points…
Parody is a form of satire that imitates the style of a particular genre, work, or artist in a way…
Polysyndeton, a stylistic device that involves the use of multiple conjunctions in close succession, often where they are not grammatically…
Paronomasia, or punning, involves using words that sound similar but have different meanings, often to humorous effect. 'Time flies like…
Tricolon is a rhetorical device that involves the use of three parallel clauses, phrases, or words, which happen to increase…
Zeugma is a figure of speech where a word, usually a verb or an adjective, is applied to more than…
Scansion is the process of analyzing a poem's meter by marking the stresses in each line and determining the metrical…
A simile is a figure of speech that compares two different things using 'like' or 'as' to highlight similarities explicitly.…
by Dave Bricker Get Started Opening Prompt Intro Call to Action Pitch! We've all suffered through the round-robin ramble—where meeting…
(366 words) Patrick Henry gave his famous speech to the Second Virginia Convention on March 23, 1775, at St. John’s…
The Rule of Threes suggests that concepts or ideas presented in threes are inherently more interesting, more enjoyable, and more…
Franklin D. Roosevelt said, “There is nothing to fear but fear itself.” Why is it that some words naturally stick…
Many of us can recite poems and lyrics we first heard when we were children. Rhythm and rhyme are beyond…
Anaphora is the repetition of a phrase to drive home the impact of a speech. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.…
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