You’re Getting Warmer
Friday, May 4, 2007 at 09:17AM
Figaro

Devil_bin-Laden.jpgQuote:  “I will follow him to the gates of Hell.”  Senator John McCain, referring to Osama bin Laden during the Republican presidential debate.

Figure of Speech: euche (YOO-kay), the vow.  From the Greek, meaning “vow.”

A bevy of ten GOP hopefuls revealed that they believe in evolution (except for a craven three who signaled they do not), and that they wouldn’t mind if the Supreme Court banned abortion.

John McCain, for his part, came locked and loaded.  When asked a dumb question about immigration, McCain dealt with it briskly and then recalled a previous dumb question about how hard we should try to get bin Laden.  The answer:  real hard.

The euche — a vow never to say die — is a classic figure of Ethos, persuasive language that enhances your image.  It makes your character seem reliable.  Even relentless.

Figaro especially loves McCain’s reference to Hell, which implies a struggle between good and evil.  Don’t examine examine a euche like that for logic, though.  One doubts that bin Laden would find refuge anywhere near the gates of Hell, unless he mistakes Hell for Pakistan.

Snappy Answer:  “Better start right now.”

For more Ethos enhancers, see page 86 of Figaro’s book.

Article originally appeared on Figures of Speech (http://inpraiseofargument.com/).
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