"Make me, O Lord, thy spinning wheel complete; Thy holy Word my distaff make for me." - This repetition of "Make me" at the beginning of each line of the stanza is an example of anaphora in "Huswifery."
"Make my affections run" and "Make my will and effort" - These phrases both begin with "Make my," showcasing anaphora in the poem.
Anaphora and epistrophe are examples of parallelism.
Huswifery describes sewing.
Female homemaking is Huswifery. It is pronounced as : Hus´wife`ry
An anaphora is a literary device in which the first part of a sentence is repeated throughout a poem or work of prose. Many psalms are examples of this literary device. An example, would be 'Deliver me lord from my enemies. Deliver me Lord from evil. Deliver me Lord from all that is not of you.'
I just got anaphora by her last night!
The devil is wating for them, hell is gaping for them, the fames gather and flash about them, and would fain lay hold on them, and swallow them up, the fire pent up.....
1684
The answer is ses
Nihil agis, nihil moliris, nihil cogitas. The anaphora is in the successive repetition of 'nihil.'
Ruslan Mitkov has written: 'Anaphora resolution' -- subject(s): Anaphora (Linguistics)
Anaphora is a rhetorical device used in writing and speech. It is a type of repetition that involves repeating a word or phrase at the beginning of successive clauses or sentences for emphasis or effect.
The cast of Anaphora - 2011 includes: Andreas Bendig Stephan Menzel Gehrke