Tessa L. Dysart

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Justice Kagan’s opinions are such targetrich environments for good techniques that I keep coming back. A few more I noticed in the past couple of weeks:

18. Change the grammatical structure mid-stream.

Rhetoriticians call this technique “anacolouthon” (from the Greek meaning “it does not follow”), in which the author/speaker interrupts herself and changes the grammatical structure of a sentence part way through. It is useful to emphasize something through an aside or exclamation:

“And if all that leaves the tiniest doubt—well, still we are not done.” Helix Energy Solutions Group, Inc. v. Hewitt, 598 U.S. 39, 55 n.
Continue Reading Writing like Justice Kagan, Part IV

Thursday’s Rhaw Bar: A Little Bite of All Things Rhetoric and Law—exploring ideas, theories, strategies, techniques, and critiques at the intersection of rhetoric and legal communication. Prompt Engineering for ChatGPT Can Improve Your Legal Writing—Even if You Never Use ChatGPT…
Continue Reading Prompt Engineering for ChatGPT Can Improve Your Legal Writing—Even if You Never Use ChatGPT