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Examples:         Assonance

 My student, Howard Jones, was becoming increasingly proficient at   Assonance occurs when several words close to each other repeat
 public speaking.   the same vowel sound, but start with different consonants.

 Sandy and Jane, both friends of mine, will be coming to the picnic.   Examples:

 No one, not even a single person, should have to endure that kind   He was tired and lied about being fired.
 of abuse.
                   You will find assonance in the last three lines below from William
 The dog, a Maremma called Danté, took care of the ostrich chicks.   Wordsworth’s poem “Daffodils”

                   “I wandered lonely as a cloud
                   That floats on high o’er vales and hills’
                   When all at once I saw a crowd,
 Apophasis         A host, of golden daffodils;
                   Beside the lake, beneath the trees,
 Apophasis, (also called paralipsis, praeteritio or occupation), is a   Fluttering and dancing in the breeze . . .”
 rhetorical device in which the speaker brings up  a subject by
 denying that it should be brought up.  The device is commonly used   So, it’s time to go and mow the lawn.
 in political speeches. The  device is can be used to distance the
 speaker from unfair claims whilst still bringing them up.
                   Asyndeton
 Examples:
                   Asyndeton is a rhetorical device in which conjunctions are omitted
 I don’t even want to talk about the  allegation that  my opponent   from a  series of clauses thus  making the statement stronger and
 made claims for funds he was not entitled to.   more memorable.

 We won’t discuss his previous misdemeanours.   The device is much more common in spoken English than it  is  in
                   written English.  When the device is used with appropriate tone,
 I shall ignore the fact that Smith is a drunk and a gambler who beats   loudness and pauses, it can be very effective.
 his wife, because we don’t want personal issues to be a part of our
 discussion here.    Examples:

                   A well-known example is, “I came, I saw, I conquered”. (translated
                   from the Latin, “Veni, vidi, vici.” Julius Caesar)

                    In “Rhetoric” by Aristotle

                   “This is the villain among you who deceived you, who cheated you,
                   who meant to betray you completely . . .”
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