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  2. Stylistic device - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stylistic_device

    2.3 Assonance. 2.4 Consonance. 2.5 Rhythm. 2.6 Onomatopoeia. 3 Structure. ... Lexique des figures de style de l'Office québécois de la langue française This page ...

  3. Exercises in Style - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exercises_in_Style

    Exercises in Style (French: Exercices de style), written by Raymond Queneau, is a collection of 99 retellings of the same story, each in a different style.In each, the narrator gets on the "S" bus (now no. 84), witnesses an altercation between a man (a zazou) with a long neck and funny hat and another passenger, and then sees the same person two hours later at the Gare St-Lazare getting advice ...

  4. Assonance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assonance

    Assonance is the repetition of identical or similar phonemes in words or syllables that occur close together, either in terms of their vowel phonemes (e.g., lean green meat) or their consonant phonemes (e.g., Kip keeps capes ). [1]

  5. 99 Ways to Tell a Story: Exercises in Style - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/99_Ways_to_Tell_a_Story:...

    99 Ways To Tell a Story: Exercises in Style is a 2005 experimental graphic novel by Matt Madden, published by the Penguin Group. Inspired by Raymond Queneau 's book Exercises in Style , it tells the same simple story in 99 different ways.

  6. Figure of speech - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Figure_of_speech

    A figure of speech or rhetorical figure is a word or phrase that intentionally deviates from straightforward language use or literal meaning to produce a rhetorical or intensified effect (emotionally, aesthetically, intellectually, etc.). [1] [2] In the distinction between literal and figurative language, figures of

  7. Literary consonance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Literary_consonance

    Consonance may be regarded as the counterpart to the vowel-sound repetition known as assonance. Alliteration is a special case of consonance where the repeated consonant sound is at the stressed syllable, [2] as in "few flocked to the fight" or "around the rugged rock the ragged rascal ran". Alliteration is usually distinguished from other ...

  8. Talk:Assonance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Assonance

    For example, if you Google "define assonance" you get: "resemblance of sound between syllables of nearby words, arising particularly from the rhyming of two or more stressed vowels, but not consonants (e.g. sonnet, porridge ), but also from the use of identical consonants with different vowels (e.g. killed, cold, culled )."

  9. Repetition (rhetorical device) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Repetition_(rhetorical_device)

    Repetition is the simple repeating of a word, within a short space of words (including in a poem), with no particular placement of the words to secure emphasis.It is a multilinguistic written or spoken device, frequently used in English and several other languages, such as Hindi and Chinese, and so rarely termed a figure of speech.