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  1. 6 days ago · a pattern in which the author introduces words or concepts in a specific order, and then later repeats those terms or similar ones in reversed or backwards order. (ex: By day the frolic, and the dance by night. Naked I rose from the earth, to the grave I fall clothed.)

  2. 6 days ago · rhetorical term that consists of three parallel clauses, phrases, or words, which happen to come in quick succession without any interruption. Could also be written down as three lines, paragraphs, chapters, or stanzas.

  3. 6 days ago · an expression designed to call something to mind without mentioning it explicitly; an indirect or passing reference

  4. 5 days ago · Schemes and tropes are both rhetorical devices, but they have different functions. While schemes are related to word order, syntax, letters, and sounds, tropes are related to the meaning of words. Onomatopoeia is an example of a scheme that deals with sounds. Words like “boom” and “howl” are schemes in which the sound of a word emulates ...

  5. 4 days ago · The rhetorical triangle is often used in the fields of rhetoric, communication studies, and composition to analyze and improve persuasive writing and speaking. Rhetorical appeals. The three points of the triangle correspond to the three rhetorical appeals: Ethos; Pathos; Logos; Ethos. Ethos, or ethical appeal, refers to the speaker or writer ...

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  6. 5 days ago · Simile and metaphor are two closely related rhetorical devices. Both involve making a figurative (nonliteral) comparison between two unlike things or people. But they differ in how they are constructed. Simile makes the comparison in the same way you would make a literal comparison: using “as,” “like,” or “than.”

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  8. 4 days ago · 1. Freytag’s Pyramid: Exposition. Your story has to start somewhere, and in Freytag’s Pyramid, it starts with the exposition. This part of the story primarily introduces the major fictional elements – the setting, characters, style, etc. In the exposition, the writer’s sole focus is on building the world in which the story’s conflict ...

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