The purpose of this study is to elucidate the characteristics of persuasion strategies of speakers through written statements of opinion in multilingual society featuring multiple languages and cultural value systems. This study considered Kyrgyzstan as an example and gathered and analyzed 112 written opinion statements from four groups: (1) monolingual Kyrgyz speakers; (2) monolingual Russian speakers; (3) bilingual Kyrgyz and Russian speakers, Kyrgyz dominant; and (4) bilingual Kyrgyz and Russian speakers, Russian dominant. The study found that monolingual and bilingual Kyrgyz speakers exhibited weak autonomy as writers, with inessential “circumstance” topos as part of their ethos. However, Russian speakers, especially monolinguals, exhibited strong autonomy as writers, favoring essential “definition” and “similitude.” This suggests that persuasion strategies with differing characteristics are favored among monolingual and bilingual Kyrgyz and Russian speakers in the context of a multilingual society.