The resting place at the end of a phrase is called a cadence. The distance between different pitches is called an interval.
The two chords at the end of a musical phrase are called a cadence.
The word at the end of a prepositional phrase is called the object of the preposition. It is the noun or pronoun that the preposition acts upon in the sentence.
The resting place at the end of a phrase is called cadence. It is wherein there is an accent or inflection in a phrase being read. In music, it is the closing of a musical phrase.
The noun or pronoun at the end of a prepositional phrase is the object of the preposition.
coda
This rhetorical device is called epistrophe. It involves repeating the same word or phrase at the end of successive clauses or sentences for emphasis or to create a powerful effect.
Une phrase (fem.)
It is called epistrophe when a speaker repeats the ending word or words of a phrase, clause, or sentence at the end of subsequent phrases, clauses, or sentences for emphasis and persuasion.
There can be many meaning to the phrase close to the edge, it could mean close to the end, to a border or put an end on, a rim or a brim, a slight but noticeable sharpness or harshness
end rhyme --A regularly repeated line or phrase at the end of a stanza is a "refrain."
epistrophe