Activity 3: ASK ME?
Directions: Write your own rhetorical questions about these school issues. Imagine
that you are trying to engage your audience.

write each in rhetorical question

example:
1. The school playground is always
untidy.
-would you like to play in a dirty playground?

2. You have heard that lots of
children are wasting water.
3. Children are not wearing helmets
when they are riding their bikes.
4. Students are not listening during
class discussion.​


Sagot :

Own Rhetorical Questions about the School Issues

2. You have heard that lots of  children are wasting water.

Answer: Would you let those kids keep wasting their water?

3. Children are not wearing helmets  when they are riding their bikes.

Answer: Didn't you tell your kids to wear helmets when riding their bikes?

4. Students are not listening during  class discussion.​

Answer: Will you students not want to listen more to my discussion?

Rhetorical Questions

A rhetorical question is one for which the questioner does not expect a direct answer; in many cases, it may be intended to begin a discourse or to display or emphasize the speaker's or author's opinion on a subject. The question "Can't you do anything right?" is a common example.

How does one formulate a rhetorical question?

The simplest way to write a rhetorical question is to form a question immediately after a statement that means the inverse of what you said. These are known as rhetorical tag questions: Wasn't the dinner delicious? (The dinner was terrible.) Isn't the new government doing well? (The government is doing poorly.)

Read more about the rhetorical question: https://brainly.ph/question/4338129

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