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Advertising is well known for its use of intensifiers:
superlatives ("greatest, best, most, beautiful, fastest,
lowest prices"), comparatives ("better than,
more advanced, improved, increased, fewer calories), hyperboles
and exaggerations, and many other ways to hype and to heap praise
upon the product being sold.
In one sense, advertisers are little different from
other wordsmiths, including poets and lovers, who use such "glittering
generalities" to praise the object of their affection,
for one motive or another.
But, in contrast to most poets and lovers, advertisers
today often have to defend their claims or face legal problems.
Puffery is the
term most often used in legal cases to describe most of the intensifiers
in ads. A rather technical definition of puffery would include the
use of words "which praise the item to be sold with subjective
opinions, superlatives, or exaggerations, vaguely or generally,
stating no specific facts."
Puffery is legal because courts have ruled that
reasonable and prudent people are able to discount such "seller's
talk."
Thus, an ad may not make a false specific
claim (for example, about the measurable quantity of an item),
yet may express almost any general subjective opinion.
In ads, as you note the intensifiers, distinguish
between any specific claims and the more general puffery.
(Ivan Preston, in The Great American Blow-Up,
while noting that puffery is legal, argues that these legal definitions
need to be refined in order to reduce falsity.)
In any persuasion situation, it's a good rule
to expect everyone to intensify their own "good" and downplay
their own "bad."
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In speech, some people use intensifiers habitually
without realizing it.
Vulgarities, for example, are commonly
used as all-purpose intensifiers to express feeling or
emphasis, unrelated to their meaning. If we simply transcribed
speech to writing, these vulgarities would be very noticeable
(the F word, the S word, etc.).
"Sweet" intensifiers are also
common in speech. Gift shop clerks have been known to go berserk
when triggered by someone saying, for the millionth time,
"Isn't that cute... nice... sweet...."
However, we'd probably not notice the more
commonplace intensifiers of conversational speech, including
words such as: "very, really, pretty, lots of, for
sure." In writing, such intensifiers can usually
be deleted or made more precise.
Writing texts once used the sexist term
"schoolgirl style" as a label for informal writing
(as in a letter or a diary) which was characterized by gushy sentimentality
or undue intensity, including frequent use of "quotation"
marks, underlining, italics, FULL CAPS, emphatic punctuation !!!
Constant use of intensifiers and absolutes may
indicate the writer's absolutist mentality, or an attempt
to persuade simply by strong assertions.
In formal logic, the fallacy of circular reasoning called "begging
the question" (petitio principio) occurs
when someone simply asserts to be true the very thing which needs
to be proven.
Words such as "obviously" are sometimes used
carelessly ("begging the question") because they try
to pass over the issues that need to be discussed.
Check your own writing habits (Use
your Find command) for these intensifiers:
absolutely, basically, certainly, definitely, fundamentally,
incredibly, obviously, of course, perfectly, positively, really,
simply, surely, very.
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