element (στοιχεῖον), 1.6.1; 2.22.13, 2.26.1 (= τόπος)
emotions, 2.1–11; belonging to different characters, 2.12–14
emulation, 2.11
encomium, distinguished from praise, 1.9.33 (deleted by Kassel; see his note in the app. crit.)
enmity, 2.4. See also hatred and anger
enthymeme: apparent, false, 2.24; destructive and constructive, 2.26.3; elements of, 2.23; a kind of syllogism, 1.1.11, 1.2.8; nature and use of, 2.22.1, 2.25.8; two kinds, 1.2.20, 1.2.22; use of in proof, 3.17.6–8
envy, 2.9.3, 2.10
epic poets, 3.3.3
epideictic rhetoric, 1.3.3–6, 1.9.1; amplification useful in, 1.9.38; best for written compositions, 3.12.5; less important in proof, 3.17.3; narrative in, 3.16.1; nature of, 2.22.6; points of agreement with deliberative, 1.9.35
epilogue, 3.13.3, 3.19
episodes, 3.17.11
epithets, 3.2.14, 3.3.3, 3.6.3, 3.6.7
equity, 1.13.12–19
error, 1.13.16
euphemism, 1.9.28–29; 3.2.10
exaggeration (δείνωσις), 2.21.10, 2.24.4
example, 1.2.8, 1.2.19; 2.20; best for deliberative rhetoric, 1.9.40; from history, 2.20.3; reasoning from, 2.25.8; refutation of, 2.25.13
excess and the exceeded, 1.7.2; in a virtue, 1.9.29
exchange of properties (ἀντίδοσις), 3.15.8
exhortation (προτροπή, opposed to ἀποτροπή), 1.3.3
expedient/ency, 1.6.1, 1.7.1
eyes, the seat of shame, 2.6.18
fable, 2.20.2, 2.20.5
fact, questions of (εἰ γέγονεν ἢ μὴ γέγονεν), 2.19.16–25