kambing
There are 105 Figure of Speech. Some of them you are familiar with are SIMILE, METAPHOR, PERSONIFICATION, and HYPERBOLE.Others are ONOMATOPOEIA, METONYMY, IRONY, LITOTES, OXYMORON, PARADOX, ALLITERATION, ALLUSION, SYNECDOCHE, ASSONANCE, ANTITHESIS, EUPHEMISM, APOSTROPHE, ANAPHORA, CHIASMUS, PUN, UNDERSTATEMENT and many more
Anaphora is repetition of word/words in successive verses or clauses. Example: I gave her cakes, and I gave her Ale I gave her sack and sherry I kissed her once,I kissed her twice And we were wondrous merry.
Home.so,some of us had two world what figure of speech
example of student short speech
"Oh, you Hard Hearts" Act 1; Scene 1; Line 35 "Give him Some Soil" Act 1; Scene 2; Line 45 Alliterations are the repetitions of initial sounds
There are quite a few famous examples of anaphora, a literary device used for repetition and emphasis. One of the most recognized examples would be the use of "I have a dream" in Martin Luther King, Jr's famous speech. The repetition of "I have a dream" before each thought emphasizes the importance of what King was stating. Another example would be part of the poem "Howl" by Allen Ginsberg. His repetition of "who" before he describes each person brings emphasis to the poem and the details of each person that has been described.
An informational speech is just a speech to explain something. Here are some good informational speech ideas to look over.
An informational speech is just a speech to explain something. Here are some good informational speech ideas to look over.
A metaphor is "a figure of speech in which an expression is used to refer to something that it does not literally denote in order to suggest a similarity"A figure of speech that makes a comparison between two unlike things, without using the word like or as.For example " My mind is a calculator, it can only do sums"Unlike a simile of which you would put like or and asfor example " My mind is like a calculator, its like it can only do sums"
Some of the Victorian era figures of speech are epiphany, bathos, synecdoche, trope,and allusion. The Victorian era had several figures of speech that are still used today. One figure of speech was "fit as a fiddle." Another was " wring their necks."
He uses some parallelism, metonymy/synechdoche and anaphora.
freedom of speech for example i can say you all suck!