Kenning. Its the device used for introducing descriptive color or for suggesting associations without distracting attention from the essential statement.
Sophocles included many literary devices that helped tell the story. The most used literary device in the play is dramatic irony. Another literary device used by Sophocles is characterization. In Oedipus the King, Sophocles used characterization to portray Oedipus as the tragic hero. A third literary device used in the play is flashback, which is where the story switches from the present to an event that occurred in the past.
You have left out a word in your question. What I suspect you meant to ask is "What literary device is used to ease some of the dramatic tension that has been established." If that is what you are asking, the answer is comic relief.
Dramatic irony
The literary device used is dramatic irony. The audience knows that the speaker is condemning himself to exile.
allusion
incident mention of something
The literary device you are referring to is "anachronism." An anachronism is something that is out of its proper time period or historical setting, often used to create a deliberate contrast or to highlight themes in a work.
The word 'device' is a noun, a word for something made or adapted for a particular purpose; a tool or machine; also a literary scheme or device; a word for a thing.
Crumpled is not a literary device in itself, but its use in describing something as crumpled can create vivid imagery or convey emotions effectively through its tactile and visual associations. It can be a powerful descriptive tool in writing.
The literary device used in "This tyrant whose sole name blisters our tongues" is metaphor. It compares the tyrant's name to something that causes physical harm or discomfort.
Understatement is a literary device that is used to downplay a meaning or make something seem less important or serious than it actually is. It often involves a deliberate understating of the magnitude or significance of a situation for effect.
Onomatopoeia is the name of the literary device in which sounds are written into words.
The literary device being described is a simile, a figure of speech that compares two different things using "like" or "as". In this case, it compares something unwieldy, slow, heavy, and pale as lead.
Hyperbole is the literary device where the writer exaggerates to create emphasis or effect. It involves describing something as larger or greater than it really is for dramatic or humorous effect.
No
First-person narration is a literary device that deals with blatantly negative language.
The literary device that is used here is repetition.