John F. Kennedy is widely known for his incredible inauguration address. It was truly inspirational to the Americans of the United States. His famous saying was, “Ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country.”
John F. Kennedy’s inaugural address is one of the most known and important speeches in U.S. history. The speech shows great leadership and states some of the many things that Kennedy promises to do to help and improve our country. He uses different rhetorical terms and figurative language to help show and emphasize his message in his inaugural address. Three ways are juxtaposition, his use of asyndetons, and how he stayed personal, but also impersonal to relate to his audience. While the speech’s…
Words 510 - Pages 3
Compare and Contrast the Inaugural Address Looking at these three different articles you see that they all use fairly diverse style elements to convey feelings of passion and to demonstrate the legacy of John Fitzgerald Kennedy. The inaugural address uses style elements such as metaphors, anaphora and archaic diction. Whereas inside Kennedy’s inauguration, 50 years on, Clift takes a different approach and uses elements like visual imagery, quotations direct from people who were close to Kennedy…
Words 897 - Pages 4
During the year of 1960, John F. Kennedy was elected as the youngest president of the United States, at the age of 43 years old. His election was perceived as a sign of hope and he was the future of America. When he was elected, his opening speech was the Inaugural Address, a speech that would a stepping stone to his success as a leader. In John F. Kennedy’s Inaugural Address, the 35th president of the United States of America builds trust with US citizens by appealing to their emotions, using hortative…
Words 650 - Pages 3
On a cold January day, a soon to be president, John F Kennedy, gave a powerful, moving inaugural speech. It was very well put together, so that it smoothly flows from topic to topic. The subject brought the audience together and unified them by speaking of our concurring heritage and obligations for the United States. The considerate president kept the speech to a minimum, only 1,343 words, according to the book, to please the live audience, and keep his underdressed self from becoming under the…
Words 393 - Pages 2
In Kennedy's speech, President John Fitzgerald Kennedy speaks to nation’s largest steel companies after they increased the steel prices by 3.5 percent. Kennedy is considerate towards economic recession, so he persuades the companies to reduce the prices of steel back to the original cost for stable prices and wages. During this time period of the 1960s, the economy was fluctuating between the wages and the cost for items, so by maintaining the cost of steel, this sacrifice the profits for the steel…
Words 455 - Pages 2
John F. Kennedy’s Inaugural Address was a signal for the winds of change that were going to transpire. Kennedy was ready to not only change the face of the United States, but to also change the face of the world with his inaugural address. In John F. Kennedy’s Inaugural Address, he used anaphora, pathos, parallelism, assonance, consonance, and antithesis in his speech to convey a feeling of change to the people hearing the speech in America and around the world and also to evoke national pride among…
Words 573 - Pages 3
Kennedy Essay John Fitzgerald Kennedy’s Inaugural Address, The article “Inside Kennedy’s Inauguration, 50 Years on”, and a photograph of the swearing-in ceremony all contribute to an understanding and appreciation of the legacy of John Fitzgerald Kennedy. All three of these documents contribute to the legacy by their different styles. These documents all have differences, but the one thing that makes them the same, describes that they all convey the legacy of John Fitzgerald Kennedy. The first…
Words 814 - Pages 4
John F. Kennedy’s inaugural address was in 1961. There are 3 pieces of evidence given about JFK’s inauguration address. The inaugural address, the article titled “Inside Kennedy’s Inauguration, 50 Years On”, and an image of Kennedy receiving the Oath to Office are the 3 texts that have similarities within them but also have differences. These documents all impact the legacy of John Fitzgerald Kennedy. All 3 texts inform the audience, which is everyone in the world about what his inaugural address…
Words 506 - Pages 3
Speech to Remember One of the most influential and popular presidents in the history of the United States of America began his legacy with possibly the greatest inauguration speech of all time. The 35th president of the United States, John F. Kennedy, in his inaugural speech dictates the freedoms and goals that the world will witness after the Cold war during his presidency. Kennedy writes to impress and inspire his listeners regarding the statement that under his presidency, all of the United States…
Words 918 - Pages 4
An inaugural address is a speech given at Washington D.C. on January 20th, which informs the people of their intentions as a leader, in which John Fitzgerald Kennedy’s inaugural possesses a vast use of rhetorical devices, or surface details in order to accomplish objectives of his speech. John F. Kennedy uses antithesis, parallelism, ethos, syntax, diction, antimetabole, anaphora, and a variety of sentence structures to grasp the audience’s attention, and to demonstrate what he desires to accomplish…
Words 702 - Pages 3