Rhetorical Choices
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100

Repetition of the same consonant sound at the beginning of words

Alliteration

100

The use of words whose sounds echo their sense.

Onomatopoeia

100

A set of similarly structured words, phrases, or clauses

Parallelism

100

Attributing human qualities to inhuman beings/inanimate objects

Personification

200

Regular repetition of the same word or phrase at the beginning of phrases or paragraphs

Anaphora

200

When two extremes are put next to each other (i.e., heaven and hell)

Antithesis

200

the inversion of the natural or usual word order.

Anastrophe

200

A question with no answer or an obvious answer

Rhetorical Question

300

Exaggeration for the purpose of emphasis or heightened effect.

Hyperbole

300

The repetition of the last word of one clause at the beginning of the following clause.

Anadiplosis

300

The repetition of similar vowel sounds in the stressed syllables of adjacent words.

Assonance

300

The repetition of words/phrases at the end of successive clauses or sentences (like anaphora but in reverse)

Epistrophe 

400

When the first clause or phrase is reversed in the second

Chiasmus

400

Identifying one thing with something closely associated

Metonymy

400

Two contradictory terms or ideas used together

Oxymoron

400

The use of many conjunctions; has the effect of slowing down the reader

Polysyndeton

500

Conjunctions are omitted producing fast-paced prose

Asyndeton

500

Opposite of hyperbole; intensifies an idea by understatement

Litotes

500

A statement that appears to be contradictory but has some truth

Paradox

500

Using a part to represent the whole

Synecdoche