commemorative speech template

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Commemorative Speech Template

Commemorative Speech Objectives:1. Create a speech that is short, eloquent,

and commemoratively inspiring to all. 2. Commemorate or pay tribute to a person, group, institution, thing, idea or event. 3. Organize your thoughts and ideas so as to inspire your audience. 4. Use the richness and beauty of language to commemorate and inspire.  5. Learn to effectively use a Manuscript when delivering a speech.

Ideas to Focus onFocus on the values of life and past,

present, and future of society. For instance hope, trust, kindness,

courage, loyalty, wisdom, disappointment, camaraderie, dignity, success, and tradition are good public speaking speech topics.

Commemorative SpeechA commemorative speech is a ceremonial

address of honor and celebration of the values of a person, group, institution, a place, an event, an idea or a subject.

So, it's more than a tribute, that is a testimonial that celebrates achievements or essential accomplishments. By commemorating you go an important step further.

The best commemorative speech does not inform, but rather they inspire, commemorate or pay tribute in order: To give the audience hope for the future. To uplift the listeners' feelings and emotions. To heighten their admiration for the person,

group, institution, event or idea being praised.

To express feelings, arouse sentiments.

EulogyA special form is the eulogy. These

commemorative speech topics praise and honor a person who died.

Use this list of commemorative speech topics to tickle your imagination. It will help you effectively to sort out, organize and outline your thoughts and ideas. Answer all the questions that are appropriate to you. And apply the answers to your subject, the occasion and the feelings of the public. In fact it is an commemorative speech example.

1. Start with a significant aspect of your subject to commemorate. a person - Describe how the person you

honored always takes care of the pets in your neighbourhood a place - Describe the natural world wonder you commemorate, and how it inspires thousands of visitors to protect nature in their local community

an event - Describe how the Superbowl unites many fans, what happens at the big day, what it means to them.

a group - Describe that the baseball team being honored became champion because of their co-operation.

So, what significant aspect of your subject represents or symbolizes an important value in our own lives? Maybe it will help if you ask yourself the basic who, when, what where, why and how questions about your subject to figure it out. That is also a fine way to develop the other suggested commemorative speech topics below.

2. Explain why you are the speaker and want to pay a tribute.Mention the reasons and the character of

the occasion in your commemoration speech. Why does your subject deserves to be

honored? Why this kind of tribute? Why at this moment, why at this occasion?

3. Refer to the particular contributions, achievements or merits.Give concrete examples. E.g. What has

been accomplished, in what way?

4. Build in commemorative speech topics describing why the efforts, impressions, achievements are such a success.

Who or what will benefit? Why is this way of thinking or acting

valuable to us?

5. Link your examples to the morality, taste, beliefs, opinions and sentiments of your audience.

These speech topics are the heart of your commemoration address. What specific values can we distract and which ones make the difference?

How can we also apply the values? Why do we need to apply them too?

Describe the values in such a way that all attendees can empathize and re-experience these feelings.

If the commemorated subject is a person, then ask yourself for example: what can we learn of the subjects' way of approaching things in his personal or professional life?

Celebrate the persons special manner. If the subject for instance is a war monument, then ask yourself, what values does this monument stand for?

What are we commemorating at this place and why?

6. Now, make a summarizing transition.Link the previous commemorative speech

topics of the important values to the common feelings and thoughts that you and the audience share.

Illustrate them with a short story, anecdote, facts or a testimony of a symbolic personal experience with the subject.

7. Conclude with a memorable summary of the commemorative speech topics you have been talking about.

Help the audience members to remember your main message. Especially emphasize the values that are being celebrated in you talk. Use a attention getting oneliner that captures the whole idea.

Language and the style of the presentation

1. Use expressive and elegant language. 2. Formulate in an eloquent serious style. 3. Avoid exaggerating expressions in your

commemorative speech topics.

The second is utilizing stylistic devices to enhance the imagery, rhythm, and creativity of the speech.

Antithesis"If you fail to prepare–You prepare to fail.”"Let us never negotiate out of fear. But

never let us fear to negotiate"

Alliteration"You want your speech to be a clear,

concise, creative, commemoration."

Parllelism"Our mission is to right wrong, to do justice,

and to serve humanity"-- the use of parallel ideas in succession.

Alliteration and Parallelism"The task is heavy, the toil is long, and the

trials will be severe"

Simile"Her eyes were like limpid pools." "The Red Man has ever fled the White Man,

as the morning mist flees before the morning sun"

Metaphore"Your eyes are the windows to your soul.“ "My Mother was the spoonful of sugar that

sweetened life's bitter medicine"

Repetitionusing the same phrase over throughout

your speech or in succession as in Martin Luther King's "I Have a Dream" speech and the "I have a dream" phrase.

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