No, it is a noun (a punctuation mark). The word is also used for a rhetorical device.
That would be apostrophe.
The answer is insinuation but I'm not sure that it's a rhetorical device.
Answer this question… Rhetorical question
Rhetorical device
No, it is a noun (a punctuation mark). The word is also used for a rhetorical device.
An apostrophe is a rhetorical device where the speaker addresses an absent or imaginary person or object. In his Narrative, Frederick Douglass addresses his apostrophe to his former owner, Captain Anthony, expressing his anger and challenging his authority.
That would be apostrophe.
Juliet is using the rhetorical device apostrophe where you address a person who is not present, except that, unknown to her, Romeo is actually present.
"Out of the blue" is an example of an idiom, not a rhetorical device. It means something unexpected or surprising.
figurative language
pathos
ok
I want to use a different sentence using rhetorical devices (explanations) one nonpredjudicial one predujucial I want to see different sentences using rhetorical devices (explanations) one nonpredjudicial one predujucial
prejudicial use of rhetorical devices?
The answer is insinuation but I'm not sure that it's a rhetorical device.
Rhetorical Explanation.