Alliteration
I wore pens in my pocket, what figure of speech is this?
THEY HAVE BOTH
is a figure of speech in which someone absent or death or something non-human is addressed as if it were alive and present and could reply.
By repeating the same word over and over again.
Paraphrase isn't a figure of speech. However, it is a technique used by writers. It means to take new information and then put it into your own words.
consonants and vowels
A figure of speech
The Tagalog term for "figure of speech" is "larawang-diwa."
figure of speech according to categories
figure of speech is a kind of a style. the credit of this is point of figure.
They are verbs
Simile
The figure of speech in the first line is Simile.
No, hyperbole is not a repetition device. Hyperbole is a figure of speech where exaggeration is used for emphasis or effect, while repetition involves repeating words or phrases for rhetorical or stylistic purposes.
figure of speech
The six figure of speech are:SimileMethaporPersonificationHyperboleOnomatopiaIronyBY: JULIA GONZALES AND DIANE MERCADER
No, "a" is not a phoneme on its own. In English, "a" is typically a grapheme representing the vowel sound /ə/ or /eɪ/, but it is not a distinct phoneme in the phonemic inventory of English. Phonemes are the smallest units of sound that can change the meaning of a word in a given language.