Anaphora | Epanaphora-Figure of Speech
Anaphora | Epanaphora- Figure of Speech
Anaphora | Epanaphora-Figure of Speech
‘Anaphora’ or ‘Epanaphora’ means ‘carrying back’. This figure consists in the repetition of a word or phrase at the beginning of successive clauses or sentences. Examples:
- Ring out the old shapes of foul disease
Ring out the narrowing lust of gold
Ring out the thousand wars of old. –Tennyson (In Memoriam)
- Be bold, be brief, be gone.
- Stay safe, stay well, stay happy.
- Fool me once, shame on you
Fool me twice, shame on me. 0 0 0.
Epanaphora-Figure of Speech
Read More: Simile Meaning, Definition, Illustration
Epanaphora-Figure of Speech
N. B. The article ‘Anaphora | Epanaphora- Figure of Speech‘ originally belongs to the book ‘The Rhetoric‘ by Menonim Menonimus.
Related Search:
- Anaphora-Definition and Examples
- Epanaphora- Figure of Speech
- Anaphora Examples
- Asyndeton-Definition and Examples
- Definition and Examples of Asyndeton
- Chiasmus-Figure of Speech
- Chiasmus-Definition and Examples
Books of Composition by M. Menonimus:
- Advertisement Writing
- Amplification Writing
- Note Making
- Paragraph Writing
- Notice Writing
- Passage Comprehension
- The Art of Poster Writing
- The Art of Letter Writing
- Report Writing
- Story Writing
- Substance Writing
- School Essays Part-I
- School Essays Part-II
- School English Grammar Part-I
- School English Grammar Part-II