Anadiplosis

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Anadiplosis (from the Greek: ἀναδίπλωσις, anadíplōsis, "double, duplicate") is a literary device that consists of repeating the last word of a previous statement. The phrase or word is used at the end of a sentence and then used again at the beginning of the next sentence.

Examples

Hey, don't be afraid, and my ninfa Tell him., / Tell him. I die.
Esteban Manuel de Villegas, XVII century
Evil will forgive you hours; / hours That's what they're dealing with. days, / the days that roaring are the years.
Luis de Góngora, 17th century
That you are. . / You.Aerial shadow, how many times
Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer, nineteenth century
My temple, flowery balcony / of my early ages, / black is, and my heart, / and my heart with canes.
Miguel Hernández, 20th Century
No one loves only a heart: / a heart It doesn't work without a body.
José María Fonollosa, 20th century
Sometimes I think of you even dressed, / dressed for women the night, / the night that changed so much My life; / My lifeLet me unzip you.
Javier Krahe, 20th century
Everything happens and everything stays, but ours is Pass, / Pass doing roads, / roads over the sea.
Antonio Machado, 20th Century
The soul of Blancaflor / wound floats in the river / in the river of love.
Oscar Hahn, 20th Century
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