similie, comparing two things using like or as, syntax, arrangement of words. brevity: short horative: urgency, hypophora, ask question and answer it straight away, pejoratives, a word or phrase with negative connotations, expressing contempt, criticism, or dissent, metonymy, using a word or phrase to represent something that is closely associated with it, chremamorphism, human is given inanimate qualities, imperatives, signifies great importance or neccessity, often appearing in contexts where something is crucial or unavoidable for the plot or character, zoomorphism, animal attributes are imposed on non human events, sydecdoche, part of something represents whole, highlight aspect, metaphor, asserts that one thing is like another thing, not literally, hyperbole, exaggerated statements that emphasize a point , Diction, An author's or character;s specific choice and use of words and phrases, impacting the work's meaning., personification, gives human qualities, emotions, and characteristics to non-human objects, animals, or concepts., motif, reccuring elements, images, or ideas that have significance to overall idea, symbolism, object, character, situation, idea represents something, lexical choice, the choice if words to give the expression meaning, oxymoron, Figure of speech that puts together opposite elements, dichotomy, A division or contrast between two, often opposing, ideas., euphemism, Polite, mild phrases which substitute unpleasant ways to say something sad or uncomfortable., dysphemism, Harsh, offensive, or derogatory word or phrase is used in place of a more neutral or pleasant one to express strong emotions likw contempt, anger, or humour, phantasmagoria , a confusing or strange scene that is like a dream because it is always changing, Pathetic Fallacy, Human emotions, feelings, and traits are attributed to inanimate objects, nature, or animals, Allegory, a surface story with another story within, chiasmus, grammatical structure that inverts a previous phrase, antithesis, Pair of statements or images in which one reverses the other. It means opposite, anticlassis, word or phrase is repeated within a sentence, with each use having a different meaning., anadiplosis, the last word/phrase is repeated at the start of the next., transferred epithet, a figure of speech where an adjective (the epithet) is grammatically attached to a noun that it does not logically describe. Instead, the modifier transfers its meaning to another noun in the sentence., superlative, A description that takes something to its furthest extreme., epigraph, A short quotation at the beginning of a book or chapter that is reflective of its themes., synesthesia, When one sense is described using the language of another, epistrophe, word or phrase is repeated at the end of clauses or sentences that follow each other, polyptoton, repetition of a root word in a variety of ways, polysyndeton, multiple repitions of same conjunction, asyndeton, skipping one or more conjuncton usually in a series of phrases, anaphora, word or phrase repeated at start of sentences following each other, parallelism, phrases in sentence have similar or same grammatical structure.

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