PAROLE IN INGLESE ASSOCIATE CON «EPANADIPLOSIS»
epanadiplosis
anadiplosis
repetition
last
word
preceding
clause
used
sentence
then
again
beginning
next
epanadiplosis
rhet
figure
which
same
both
rejoice
lord
always
retoricas
figuras
retóricas
figura
retórica
consiste
comenzar
terminar
misma
frase
palabra
nota
pertenece
wiktionary
uncountable
rhetoric
speech
define
plosis
make
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ɪˌpænədɪˈpləʊsɪs
artificio
retórico
consistente
empezar
acabar
verso
fuerte
parca
pero
más
debió
wordreference
significados
discusiones
reduplicación
sustantivo
femenino
repetición
final
cláusula
rethorika
bien
supone
codificación
cerebral
busca
decodificación
ingenua
vital
quizá
esta
relación
autor
10 LIBRI IN INGLESE ASSOCIATI CON «EPANADIPLOSIS»
Scopri l'uso di
epanadiplosis nella seguente selezione bibliografica. Libri associati con
epanadiplosis e piccoli estratti per contestualizzare il loro uso nella letteratura.
1
A Dictionary of Literary Devices: Gradus, A-Z
EPANADIPLOSIS The ending of the second of two correlative clauses with the
word or words that began the first. See Dumarsais, (4:139), Scaliger (4:30),
Lausberg, and Morier. Ex: 'You bleed when the white man says bleed. You bite
when ...
Bernard Marie Dupriez, Albert W. Halsall, 1991
2
Musica Poetica: Musical-Rhetorical Figures in German Baroque ...
EPANADIPLOSIS, REDUPLICATIO: a restatement of the opening of a passage or
phrase at its close. The term epanadiplosis does not appear in rhetorical treatises
prior to the eighteenth century. A more common figure with a synonymous ...
3
The AMA Handbook of Business Writing: The Ultimate Guide to ...
Epanadiplosis. Epanadiplosis is a literary term when a word or phrase is
repeated at the beginning and end of a phrase, clause, or sentence. Example:
The king is dead, long live the king.
Kevin WILSON, Jennifer WAUSON, 2010
2 and 6. See Ap. 32. There is, &c. Quoted in Rom. 3. 10-12 with other scriptures.
doeth good. The Sept. adds " no not one ". This completes the Fig. Epanadiplosis
with v. 3 (Ap. 6). 3 The LORD. Heb. Jehovah. Ap. 4. II. Fig. Epanadiplosis (Ap. 6).
5
The New Universal Etymological English Dictionary: ...
In Latin this figure is called Inclasio. EPANADIPLOSIS (with Physicians) frequent
redoublings or returns of fevers. EPANALEPSIS (sx««Xs4i(, pf rxxm- Xa/*Gua>,
Gr. to repeat) a repetition. EPANALEPSIS (with Rhetoricians) a figure, in which ...
6
Typology and Iconography in Donne, Herbert, and Milton: ...
If one wished to adhere to a strict definition, one could argue that because this is
a complete poem comprised of two grammatical sentences (or sections), the
entire poem cannot qualify as an example of epanadiplosis. But because Herbert
so ...
7
Literature in the First Media Age
The rhetorical figure that seems most trenchantly to have captured dialectical
materialism's song—its claim to stand as alpha and omega—is epanadiplosis,
which begins and ends a sentence with the same word. The “reality of life” is not
hard ...
8
Seneca: Medea: Edited with Introduction, Translation, and ...
Are sought: note both the declinatio (see on 28–31) and the epanadiplosis (use
of the same word at the start and end of a line, clause, or sentence). For
epanadiplosis elsewhere in Senecan tragedy: see e.g. 922–3, 947–8, 984 below,
HF ...
9
P. Virgilii Maronis Æneis. The Æneïd of Virgil, with Engl. ...
The expression ipsum , . . ipso forms what grammarians term an epanadiplosis,
which is defined as follows: "Epanadiplosis est,quum idem verbum in eddern
sentenlia et primum est et exlremum. Latine diciiur inclusiu." (Rufinian. de schem.
Publius Vergilius Maro, Charles Anthon, William Trollope, 1847
10
The Æneïd of Virgil with Engl. notes, by C. Anthon. Adapted ...
The expression ipsum .... ipso forms what grammarians term an epanadiplosis,
which is denned as follows : " Epanadiplosii est, quum idem veroum in eadem
sententia et primum est et extremum. Latiiie dicitur inclusio." (Rufinian. de schem.
Publius Vergilius Maro, Charles Anthon, Frederick Metcalfe, 1846