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“The pen is mightier than the sword”.
 (Written word is more important than force.)

 “The White House will be making a decision today”.
                 Oxymoron
 “The library was a help to the students”.     An oxymoron is a literary device in which seemingly contradictory elements appear side by side.

 “Give me a hand to finish these tasks please”.
                   Examples:

 Onomatopoeia    Living dead
                 Cruel kindness
                 Making haste slowly
 Onomatopoeia uses words which phonetically sound like the sound   Alone together
                 Bitter sweet
 they are being used to describe. Onomatopoeia can be a powerful   Awfully good
 tool for both speakers and writers, as it allows the audience to have   Deafening silence
                 Deceptively honest
 some emotional involvement with the words being used.   Good grief
                 Lead balloon
 Examples:       Plastic glasses
                 Pretty ugly
                 Unbiased opinion
 a-ha   growl   swoosh     Parallelism
 ah-choo   grunt   thud
 bam   gurgle   thump   Parallelism is a rhetorical device in which  parts  of  sentences are given a  similar form, thus
 bash   gush   tweet   giving a definite pattern.

 bingle   hiss   warble   Examples:
 boom   jingle   whiff     Easy come, easy go.
 clang   kerplunk   whip   Like father, like son.
 clank   meow   whisper   What goes around comes around.
                 “To err is human, to forgive divine.” (Alexander Pope)
 clap   moo   whizz   “I don’t want to live on in my work. I want to live on in my apartment.” (Woody Allen)
 clatter   mumble   whoosh
 click   murmur   wow     Paronomasia
 clink   neigh
 cluck   oink    Paronomasia is also known as a pun. It is a device in which a word is used in different senses
 cock-a-doodle-  purr   or words with similar sounds are used to achieve a desired effect, often dual meaning.

 doo   quack     Examples:
 cough   ribbit     “Well, I’d rather have a bottle in front of me than a frontal lobotomy”.
 cuckoo   screech   (Tom Waits in “fernwood2Night”, 1977)
 ding   slap
 drip   splash     “Contraceptives should be used on every conceivable occasion”.
 drizzle   spray   (Spike Milligan)
 flutter   sprinkle
 gasp   squirt
 giggle   swish
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