MCG Active Member Joined May 29, 2012 Posts 3,829 Reacts 1 Reputation 0 Credits 3 Mar 7, 2015 #1 This is the quotation: "She had no fine dresses, no jewellery, nothing"[font=Tahoma, Verdana, Arial, sans-serif] [/font] [font=Tahoma, Verdana, Arial, sans-serif]What is the name of literary device?[/font]
This is the quotation: "She had no fine dresses, no jewellery, nothing"[font=Tahoma, Verdana, Arial, sans-serif] [/font] [font=Tahoma, Verdana, Arial, sans-serif]What is the name of literary device?[/font]
Fade Power member. Joined Oct 12, 2013 Posts 6,234 Reacts 1 Reputation 0 Credits 40 Mar 7, 2015 #2 What do you mean by literary device?
MCG Active Member Joined May 29, 2012 Posts 3,829 Reacts 1 Reputation 0 Credits 3 Mar 7, 2015 #3 Fade said: What do you mean by literary device? Click to expand... In the same way that the device used in this quotation is personification: "Two or three pencils that had survived" Would you say the quotation in my first post is rhetorical language?
Fade said: What do you mean by literary device? Click to expand... In the same way that the device used in this quotation is personification: "Two or three pencils that had survived" Would you say the quotation in my first post is rhetorical language?
Moon Knight Active Member Joined Apr 8, 2011 Posts 1,997 Reacts 58 Reputation 3 Credits 4,568 Mar 7, 2015 #4 Your quotation has no context to make a decision. If you provided the full article, people probably wouldn't be so confused and thus give you an answer. (Full Article: https://books.google.co.uk/books?id...o fine dresses, no jewellery, nothing&f=false) In answer to your second post, no.
Your quotation has no context to make a decision. If you provided the full article, people probably wouldn't be so confused and thus give you an answer. (Full Article: https://books.google.co.uk/books?id...o fine dresses, no jewellery, nothing&f=false) In answer to your second post, no.
NULLNULLNULL User is banned. Joined Apr 21, 2014 Posts 1,676 Reacts 0 Reputation 0 Credits -79 Mar 7, 2015 #5 I guess you could say alliteration for 'N' but even so it seems like a very weak claim.