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Polemic is a mode of writing or speaking that uses vigorous and combative language to defend or oppose someone or something. A person who is skilled in debate or someone who is inclined to argue vehemently in opposition to others is called a polemicist (or, less commonly, a polemist). …
intransitive verb. 1 : to yield to superior strength or force or overpowering appeal or desire succumb to temptation. 2 : to be brought to an end (such as death) by the effect of destructive or disruptive forces.
1a : designed or intended to teach. b : intended to convey instruction and information as well as pleasure and entertainment didactic poetry. 2 : making moral observations.
From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishdi‧dac‧tic /daɪˈdæktɪk, də-/ adjective 1 speech or writing that is didactic is intended to teach people a moral lesson His novel has a didactic tone.
Describing a person as “didactic” is almost never a compliment; describing something written or made by a person usually isn’t either. In educational settings, though, didactic can describe a kind of instruction that involves lectures and textbooks only, as opposed to laboratory or clinical work.
A didactic text is one that teaches and instructs, and originally, the idea was that learning should be done in an intriguing manner. Over time, the term didactic has taken on a negative connotation, as a text that seeks to instruct or teach is sometimes seen as dull or “preachy.”
Fable: A short tale that teaches a moral. It usually has animals or inanimate objects as characters.
allegory. noun. a story, play, or poem in which the events and characters are used as symbols in order to express a moral, religious, or political idea.