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Epanadiplosis is a figure of repetition affecting syntactic position (the order of words in the sentence). [2] For César Chesneau Dumarsais, the figure appears “when, of two correlative propositions, one begins and the other ends with the same word”, [3] or when, according to Henri Suhamy, [4] only two propositions are involved.
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Anadiplosis (/ æ n ə d ɪ ˈ p l oʊ s ɪ s / AN-ə-di-PLOH-sis; Greek: ἀναδίπλωσις, anadíplōsis, "a doubling, folding up") is the repetition of the last word of a preceding clause. [1]
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Given the memorable nature of the phrase (owing, in part, to epanadiplosis), as well as its historic significance, the phrase crops up regularly as a headline for articles, editorials, or advertisements on themes of succession or replacement.
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A. Talk:A-not-A question; Talk:Peter Abelard; Talk:Académie Française; Talk:Acronym; Talk:Adversarial stylometry; Talk:Affirmation and negation; Talk:Affricate
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