Anadiplosis

format_list_bulleted Contenido keyboard_arrow_down
ImprimirCitar

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

Contenido relacionado

Language philosophy

The philosophy of language is the branch of philosophy that studies language in its most general and fundamental aspects, such as the nature of meaning and...

The happy whale

La Ballena Alegre was the name of a Spanish literary gathering that during the Second Republic met in the basement of the Café Lion on Calle de Alcalá...

The right to read

The right to read is the Spanish title of the short story "The right to read", written by Richard Stallman in 1996. In it, The author offers his...
Más resultados...
Tamaño del texto:
undoredo
format_boldformat_italicformat_underlinedstrikethrough_ssuperscriptsubscriptlink
save