Winston Churchill
We Shall Fight on The Beaches (2nd speech given in the Battle of France)
After you hear this speech, you would notice that the speaker, Churchill, connects with the audience consistently using the word "we" - which is using repetition. It also means that he uses emotive words and phrases to appeal to the audience's heart. He also frames the situation fairly positively having said at the end of the speech; "the New World" which means at the end of the war.
John Fitzgerald Kennedy
We Choose To Go To The Moon
John F. Kennedy used rhetorical strategies to influence the American nationals to support his decision and assure it happens. He also uses all three Greek terms of pathos, logos and ethos. Pathos refers to an emotional appeal, and Kennedy uses that by saying "We meet at a college noted for knowledge, in a city noted for progress, in a state noted for strength" which receives emotions such as pride and acceptance from the public. Logos refers to logic and ethos to credibility, of which both are used widely in the speech. Also, the term "We Choose to Go to The Moon" also got many reactions from the crowd.
Mahatma Gandhi
Quit India Movement
In this speech, Gandhi called for peace between the rising tensions of Muslim's and Hindu's before they were encouraged to realize that they were Indians first and Muslims or Hindus second. Quit India primarily focuses on Gandhi's thirst for freedom and human rights.
Gandhi incorporates pathos, logos and ethos. Using ethos, he uses repetition and religious suggestions. He uses pathos by creating fear and logos by using consistent reasoning.
Gandhi incorporates pathos, logos and ethos. Using ethos, he uses repetition and religious suggestions. He uses pathos by creating fear and logos by using consistent reasoning.
Martin Luther King Jr.
I Have A Dream
King mainly uses repetition and 'analogies' to persuade his audience to stop racial discrimination.