5.5: Glossary
- Page ID
- 301707
This page is a draft and is under active development.
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AI (Artificial Intelligence): Computer systems designed to perform tasks that normally require human intelligence, such as generating ideas, answering questions, or suggesting speech topics.
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Areas of Interest: Personal hobbies, passions, or fields of study that can serve as inspiration for speech topics.
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Aristotle: A Greek philosopher who defined three classical types of speeches: deliberative (future action), forensic (past actions), and epideictic (praise/blame in the present).
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Basic Prompts: Simple, broad AI queries that generate general topic ideas but may lack focus.
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ChatGPT: An AI tool that uses natural language processing to generate text, answer questions, and help refine or narrow speech topics.
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Cicero: A Roman rhetorician who outlined three purposes of speech: to inform (docere), to delight (delectare), and to move (movere).
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Core: The central purpose or main idea of a speech that guides what information is most important.
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Demonstration Speech: A type of speech where the speaker shows the audience how to do something step by step.
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Entertain Speech: A speech designed to amuse, engage, or inspire the audience through stories, humor, or creativity.
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General Purpose: The broad overall goal of a speech: to demonstrate, inform, persuade, or entertain.
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In-Depth Prompts: Detailed AI queries that specify purpose, audience, or type of speech, generating more focused and usable topic suggestions.
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Informative Speech: A type of speech designed to increase the audience’s knowledge or understanding of a subject.
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Internet: A resource for finding current, trending, or credible information that can inspire or support speech topics.
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Main Points: The primary divisions of a speech’s body, usually limited to two or three in a short speech.
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Narrowing: The process of refining a broad subject into a specific, focused topic that fits within time, audience, and purpose.
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Personal Experience: Individual life events or firsthand knowledge that can provide authentic and relatable speech topics.
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Prompts: The questions or requests typed into an AI tool to generate ideas or information.
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Purpose: The reason for giving a speech, answering the question “Why am I speaking?”
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Relevant: Information or examples that directly support the purpose and topic of the speech.
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Specific Purpose: A precise statement that combines the general purpose with the exact topic and audience outcome.
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St. Augustine: An early Christian thinker who adapted rhetorical theory into three purposes of speech: to teach, to delight, and to move.
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Subtopics: Smaller, focused parts of a larger subject that help organize a speech.
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Topic: The subject matter of a speech, chosen and narrowed to match the purpose, audience, and time available.

