| Marcus Tullius Cicero - 1899 - 818 pagine
...interrogative and imperative sentences is the sign of intense feeling, abutere, ' use up,' ' exhaust ' (uot 'abuse,' 'misuse'); observe the quantity of penult...the hill toward the Via Sacra stood the temple of JupiterStator,wher«the senate wasnow assembled. Point tjut these objects on Plan A. Cicero had increased... | |
| P. T. Eden - 1975 - 244 pagine
...the engraved verse bene meriti servi sedeant, surgant liberi.) 564 ff . tris . . . terna . . . ter : the repetition of the same word at the beginning of successive clauses (anaphora) is a common method of concentrating emphasis in colloquial speech ; it also organises the... | |
| Shira Wolosky Weiss - 2001 - 248 pagine
...on etymological histories. There are still other tropes that are basically grammatical: anaphora is the repetition of the same word at the beginning of successive clauses or verses; zeugma is the use of one word to govern several phrases without being repeated. The following... | |
| Joel Sherzer - 2002 - 204 pagine
...semester I am taking anthropology and sociology and linguistics and history and mathematics. Anaphora is the repetition of the same word at the beginning of successive clauses for the purpose of providing a strong emotional effect: The Lord sitteth above the water floods. The... | |
| Naoto Kamano - 2002 - 326 pagine
...Jerusalem" in 2:7b, 9a and another occurrence of nan in 2: lib). 2. Use of anaphora Qoheleth uses anaphora, the "repetition of the same word at the beginning of successive clauses," 37 in 2:11 -12 and 2:17-18. 38 In the former, Qoheleth employs 'JK 'JVJM ("I turned") in 2:Ila and... | |
| 张秀国 - 2005 - 288 pagine
..."anaphora" originates from Greek, meaning "carrying back". It is a popular figure of speech involving the repetition of the same word at the beginning of successive clauses, sentences or verses, as in the proverb "Light come, light go. " Anaphora is commonly in conjunction... | |
| Linda Anderson - 2006 - 668 pagine
...rhetoric. It has one unbroken four-page sentence, which rises to a crescendo through the use of anaphora, the repetition of the same word at the beginning of successive clauses for rhetorical effect. As 'whosoever' is a word hijacked from the New Testament promise of victory... | |
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