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Rhetorical device like "this earth, this realm, this England"
Answer for the clue "Rhetorical device like "this earth, this realm, this England" ", 8 letters:
anaphora
Alternative clues for the word anaphora
- Poet's repetition for effect
- Word repetition
- Using a pronoun or other pro-word instead of repeating a word
- A rewrite of Mary Had a Little Lamb using ___: A lamb quite little, Mary had / A lamb, fleece white as snow
- Repetition of words at the starts of successive phrases, in rhetoric
- Literary repetition
- Repetition of a word or phrase as the beginning of successive clauses
Word definitions for anaphora in dictionaries
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
In rhetoric , an anaphora (, "carrying back") is a rhetorical device that consists of repeating a sequence of words at the beginnings of neighboring clauses, thereby lending them emphasis . In contrast, an epistrophe (or epiphora) is repeating words at ...
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. using a pronoun or other pro-word instead of repeating a word repetition of a word or phrase as the beginning of successive clauses [syn: epanaphora ]
Usage examples of anaphora.
The tricolon with anaphora is a strong formal device, appropriate to the sounds of public lamentation.
This device of beginning successive lines with the same word is called anaphora, in case you wanted to know.
The tricolon with anaphora is a strong formal device, appropriate to the sounds of public lamentation.
With themes—one window held nothing but drinking vessels, from commemorative teacups to the small mended pottery anaphoras of an archaeological dig, while the next one had figurines from all over the world, all less than two inches in height.