Examples!
Say It Again!
Persuade Me
Two-Faced
Devices Devices!
100

In books I find the dead as if they were alive; in books I foresee things to come; in books warlike affairs are set forth; from books come forth the laws of peace. --Richard de Bury

                                   


    

Anaphora

100

When something repeats over and over again ON PURPOSE

Repetition 

100

What does Ethos mean?

Character and Credibility

100

This back pack feels like it weighs a ton; it's like an elephant! 

simile and hyperbole

100

Simile

Comparing two things using like or as.

200

They spent the day wondering, searching, thinking, understanding. 

                                   


    

Asyndeton 

200

When the first letter or sounds of close together words repeats

Alliteration

200

What does Pathos mean?

Emotional Appeal

200
In fact, one might say that suffering a third degree burn is slightly painful.

Expletive and Understatement

200

Metaphor

directly comparing two things without like or as.

300

That’s one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind. –Neil Armstrong.          

                                   


    

Antithesis 

300

The repetition of the beginning parts of phrases

Anaphora

300

What does Logos mean?

Logic/Facts

300

He's a pig. She's a pig. I'm a pig. We're all pigs. 

Metaphor and repetition. 

300

Personification

giving human traits to something not alive

400

I went from neutral, to frustrated, to angry, to rabid in thirty seconds.

                                   


    

    

    

Climax

400

The repetition of the same word or words comes at the end of successive phrases, clauses, or sentences

Epistrophe

400

This Device both raises and answers a question

Hypophora

400

Surprised, Henry hopped hundreds of feet in the air. 

alliteration and hyperbole.

400

Allusion

A direct or indirect reference to something which is presumably commonly known, such as an event,

500

The code breakers worked constantly but rarely succeeded.                                   

    

Chiasmus

500

Repeats the last word of one phrase, clause, or sentence at or very near the beginning of the next.

                                   


    

Anadiplosis
500

A figure of speech that directly addresses an absent or imaginary person or a personified abstraction,

Apostrophe

500

Bang! Down goes the plates. 

Bang! Down goes the bowls.

Bang! Down goes the dishes.

Onomatopoeia, Anaphora

500
Metonymy

 A term from the Greek meaning “changed label” or “substitute name.” Metonymy is a  figure of speech in which the name of one object is substituted for that of another closely associated with it.

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