Going, Going, Gone
If you mean how to use the word 'rhetoric' in a sentence, you could say 'His words were just empty rhetoric,' meaning he was just full of hot air and no substance. If you mean how to use a rhetorical device (or figure of speech) in a sentence, a good example is JFK's famous line, "And so my fellow Americans, ask not what your country can do for you - ask what you can do for your country.' This is a device called Chiasmus, where the words in one phrase or clause are reversed in the next, i.e 'country ... you' becomes 'you ... country.'
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.
The words that come before and after the words you're trying to figure out
Words are classified as parts of speech based on their function as a word. If they are classified based on their role in the sentence, they are parts of a sentence. (there is not much difference between the two, but there is a difference)
Automagically
Oxymoron Such as: Jumbo shrimp
"He is a cut throat" is an idiom. The 5 words grouped together have a diffent meaning than if they were separate.
False.
The eighth figure of speech is irony. Irony is when words are used to convey a meaning that is the opposite of the literal meaning, often for humorous or emphatic effect.
Synonyms are words that have pretty much the same meaning. For example, "happy" and "joyful" are synonyms because they both convey a sense of positivity and contentment.
The parts of speech are also known as lexical categories, and they are the groups of certain types of words based on their function in a sentence. They include nouns, verbs, articles, pronouns, conjunctions, adverbs, prepositions, and participles. Figures of speech are words or phrases that have a less literal meaning and are used for literary effect instead of for meaning. A list of many figures of speech are here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Figures_of_speech
Nonsense. There is no sentence here, only a string of words.(an advertising slogan that relies on the implications of the three words)That is not a sentence because it does not present a complete thought, but it is representative of the figure of speech known as alliteration.
'Out of the blue' is a terse form of the expression 'out of a clear blue sky' (to mean 'unexpectedly, without foreshadowing'). It is not really a figure of speech, but an idiom. ('idiom':: an established expression in a language where the meaning is not necessarily what one would anticipate from the given meaning of the individual words).
parts of speech is the different types of words in a sentence.Figures of speech is how you speak
You see how a word is used in a sentencewhat part of speech its acting as, where its located in the sentence, if its an adjective what kind of noun is it describingB.Definition
If you mean how to use the word 'rhetoric' in a sentence, you could say 'His words were just empty rhetoric,' meaning he was just full of hot air and no substance. If you mean how to use a rhetorical device (or figure of speech) in a sentence, a good example is JFK's famous line, "And so my fellow Americans, ask not what your country can do for you - ask what you can do for your country.' This is a device called Chiasmus, where the words in one phrase or clause are reversed in the next, i.e 'country ... you' becomes 'you ... country.'
The literary term used in the words "dying gladiator" is oxymoron. An oxymoron is a figure of speech that combines contradictory terms to create a unique meaning or expression.