Stylistic Devices

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"We shall not flag or fail. We shall go on to the end. We shall fight in France, we shall fight on the seas and oceans, we shall fight with growing confidence and growing strength in the air, we shall defend our island, whatever the cost may be, we shall fight on the beaches, we shall fight on the landing grounds, we shall fight in the fields and in the streets, we shall fight in the hills. We shall never surrender." -Winston Churchill

Anaphora

"We didn't land on Plymouth Rock; Plymouth Rock landed on us." (Malcolm X)

Antimetabole

"I long and dread to close." - Adrienne Rich

Antithesis

"Let us retire to the den."

Hortative sentence

Personification

attribution of a human qualities to anything non-human

Hortative sentence

- sentence that advises or calls to action (less of a command - more of a request)

Cumulative sentence or Loose sentence

- sentence that completes the main idea at the beginning of the sentence and then builds and adds on

"A moist young moon hung above the mist of a neighboring meadow."

Alliteration

"But sweeter than the lids of Juno's eyes Or Cytherea's breath"

Allusion

Forsooth (in fact), thee (you), wherefore (why)

Archaic Diction

"Veni, vidi, vici" or "I came, I saw, I conquered" - Julius Caesar

Asyndeton

"I relish crafting a cumulative sentence, highlighting its accumulation of detail, its extra-fine addition of imagery, poised to end with a flourish, in a crescendo of form and meaning."

Cumulative sentence or Loose sentence

"Clear this desk by tomorrow!" Or "Drive to the stop sign and turn left."

Imperative Sentence

"In a hole in the ground there lived a hobbit." - JRR Tolkien

Inversion

Direct: "That child is a mouse." Implied: "I plowed through that book." (implying that I read the book in a way that a plow rips through earth - relentlessly, unreflectively)

Metaphor

The monarch being referred to as "the crown"

Metonymy

"[Slavery is a] living death." - Harriet Jacobs

Oxymoron

"It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness..." - Charles Dickens

Parallelism

"In the almost incredibly brief time which it took the small but sturdy porter to roll a milk-can across the platform and bump it, with a clang, against other milk-cans similarly treated a moment before, Ashe fell in love." - P.G. Wodehouse

Periodic Sentence

Justice is blind

Personification

Q: "Do you want some chocolate cake?" Rhetorical Question as Response: "Is the Pope Catholic"

Rhetorical Question

• "The farmers in the valley grew potatoes, peanuts, and bored." • "She opened her door and her heart to the orphan."

Zeugma

Allusion

brief reference to a person, event, or place, real or fictitious, or to a work of art

Rhetorical Question

figure of speech in the form of a question posed for rhetorical effect rather than for the purpose of getting an answer

Metaphor

figure of speech that says one thing is another in order to explain by comparison

Inversion

inverted order of words in a sentence (variation of subject-verb order)

Archaic Diction

old-fashioned or outdated choice of words

Asyndeton

omission of conjunctions between coordinate phrases, clauses, or words

Antithesis

opposition, or contrast, of ideas or words in a balanced or parallel construction

Oxymoron

paradoxical juxtaposition of words that seem to contradict one another

Juxtaposition

placement of two things closely together to emphasize comparisons or contrasts

Anaphora

repetition of a word or phrase at the beginning of successive phrases, clauses, or lines

Alliteration

repetition of the same sound beginning several words in sequence

Antimetabole

repetition of words in reverse order; A verbal pattern in which the second half of an expression is balanced against the first but with the words in reverse grammatical order (A-B-C, C-B-A).

Imperative Sentence

sentence used to command, enjoin, or entreat

Periodic Sentence

sentence whose main clause is withheld until the end; used to hld the reader's interest to the end, to add suspense

Parallelism

similarity of structure in a pair or series of related words, phrases, or clauses

Zeugma

use of two different words in a grammatically similar way but producing different, often incongruous meanings

Metonymy

using a single feature to represent a whole


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