A | B |
alliteration | repetition of sound at the beginning of words |
anacolouthon | the grammatical sequence of the sentence changes |
anaphora | repetition of the same words at the beginning of clauses or phrases. |
anastrophe | inversion of usual word order |
antithesis | opposition or contrast of words or ideas |
aposiopesis | the abrupt and deliberate pause in a sentence. |
assonance | the recurrence of similar sounds |
asyndeton | omission of conjunctions in a closely related series |
brachylogy | omission of an element which should have been repeated; and must be supplied in order to complete the thought. |
chiasmus | arrangement of pairs in opposite order: ABBA word order |
ellipsis | omission of words understood but grammatically necessary |
enallage | shifting from one form to another (e.g. plural for singular) |
epithet | descriptive term or nickname |
euphemism | using a more agreeable expression in place of an unpleasant one |
hendiadys | expressing an idea by two nouns instead of using a noun and agreeing adjective |
hyperbole | exaggeration |
hysteron - proteron | the reversal of the natural order of things |
irony | stating an apparent fact with the intention of expressing the opposite; a form of light sarcasm |
litotes | double negative or affirming something by denying the opposite |
metaphor | a direct comparison |
metonymy | the substitution of one word for another which it suggests; in Latin metonymy often uses proper names |
onomatopoeia | word whose sound suggests its meaning |
oxymoron; paradox | apparently contradictory words combined into a single expression |
personification | attributing human qualities to inanimate objects |
polysyndeton | use of unnecessary conjunctions |
synchysis | interlocked word order: ABAB |
syncope | loss of letters by contraction |
synecdoche | part for the whole |
tmesis | separation of parts of a compound word |
trajection; hyperbaton | violent displacement of words |
transferred epithet | an epithet that is appended to some act or quality fo a person or thing |
zeugma | a condensed expression in which one word is made to stand for two or more ideas |