commemorative speech
(noun)
A commemorative speech honors, celebrates, or remembers its subject.
Examples of commemorative speech in the following topics:
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Commemorative Speeches: Dedications and Eulogies
- Dedications and eulogies are two types of commemorative speeches that memorialize people and/or events.
- Commemorative speeches are those that celebrate and honor the memory of someone or something.
- The dedication is a very specific type of commemorative speech.
- A eulogy is a very specific type of commemorative speech that occurs at a person's funeral.
- Where a dedication may commemorate an event, an eulogy commemorates a specific deceased person.
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Patterns of Organization: Informative, Persuasive, and Commemorative
- The three main categories of speech are: informative, persuasive, and commemorative.
- Perhaps you are commemorating an event?
- A commemorative speech should honor, celebrate, or remember its subject.
- While informative speeches explain, educate and describe; persuasive speeches raise the stakes by using information to influence the audience; commemorative speeches assume a shared emotional connection to the subject.
- Three survivors of the Titanic, including Eva Hart, signed this postcard commemorating the tragedy.
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Choosing the Main Points
- What can your speech offer that the audience won't find elsewhere?
- Most speeches aim to do one of three things: to inform, to persuade, or to commemorate.
- Choose main points that will fulfill your speech's overall purpose:
- A commemorative speech usually compiles stories and wisdom that will help the audience honor, remember, or celebrate something.
- Remember the broad purpose of your speech--to inform, to persuade, or to commemorate--as you choose your main points.
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Key Differences Between Prepared and Impromptu Speeches
- The most common type of speech is a prepared speech.
- A prepared speech can be an extemporaneous, manuscript, or memorized speech, or a combination of these techniques.
- A manuscript speech is one that has the entire speech written out for reference.
- While this seems like a difficult style in which to give a speech, most speech in a person's daily life is impromptu.
- Visual aids and slides could be part of a prepared speech, but not an impromptu speech.
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Scoping Your Speech
- Make sure that only the most relevant information is including in the speech, so the scope of your speech does not become too wide.
- Properly scoping your speech allows the speaker to narrow down what the speech will cover, thus increasing its ability to inform the audience.
- One way to effectively scope a speech is to think of the question: "What information do I want my audience to know at the end of the speech?
- By narrowing the scope of the speech, the speaker improve the speech's ability to effectively communicate essential information to the audience.
- If it's only a tangent, it doesn't belong in the speech.
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Speeches for Special Occasions
- Some special occasions require speeches that are different than speeches aimed at informing or persuading audiences.
- As the name implies, special occasion speeches are speeches that are given on special occasions.
- Special occasion speeches are usually shorter than informative or persuasive speeches.
- Special occasion speeches might inform the audience.
- Differentiate a special occasion speech from an informative or persuasive speech
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Make It Memorable
- There are multiple ways to make your speech memorable.
- Lay out the important keys in the introduction of the speech, reiterate them in the body of the speech, and then repeat them again in the conclusion.
- Though there are many ways to make an informative speech memorable, another way is to let yourself be engaged in the presentation of the speech.
- Therefore, let yourself be absorbed and excited by the speech, which might lure in the audience and make the speech more memorable.
- These are just a few ways to make your speech memorable.
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Practical Tips for Speaking in Non-Academic Settings
- Two types of speeches given in non-academic settings are entertainment speeches and persuasive speeches.
- Entertainment speeches may be given at a wedding or other social event.
- Will they respond well to the content of your speech?
- Is the speech too short or too long?
- Focus on the end result of your speech when preparing - all parts of your speech should focus on the end goal of your persuasive topic.
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Persuasive Speeches
- In a persuasive speech, a speaker attempts to persuade the audience to adopt his/her position in relation to a topic.
- A persuasive speech can be seen in the image where William Jennings Bryan gives a campaign speech.
- The core of a persuasive speech is pathos: appealing to and resonating with the audience's feelings and emotions.
- In addition to pathos, persuasive speeches contain appeals to ethos and logos.
- Political speeches aim is to persuade the audience to vote for the speaker.
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The Goals of an Informative Speech
- An effective informative speech should be driven by a series of goals.
- An effective informative speech requires the speaker to aim for a series of goals.
- Most memorable speeches have emotional appeals that audiences continue to talk about long after the speech is delivered, and sometimes even after the life of the speaker.
- To make sure that the information contained in a speech is remembered by the audience, the deliverer of an informative speech should combine organization, repetition and focused visualizations to increase the effectiveness of the speech and the likelihood that the audience will leave informed.
- Unlike persuasive speeches, which rely heavily on emotional appeal, informative speeches have to demonstrate why the audience should care about the information contained in the speech without compromising a neutral tone.