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Take a look at this shmoopy question and see if you can figure out which device the speaker employs the most.
AP English Language and Composition 6.3 Passage Drill 228 Views
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Description:
AP English Language and Composition 6.3 Passage Drill. The author states that is main objective in this reading is to what?
Transcript
- 00:00
[ musical flourish ]
- 00:02
And here's your Shmoop du jour, brought to you by mysterious priests.
- 00:06
There's nothing like wearing a dark robe
- 00:08
to make you look shady.
- 00:10
All right. Februus, remember him?
Full Transcript
- 00:12
All right, yeah. Read it, read it. Come on, get through it.
- 00:15
What literary device is demonstrated in lines eight through ten?
- 00:19
And here are the potential answers.
- 00:21
Lot of five dollar words.
- 00:24
Okay, well, we've got another literary device question here.
- 00:28
It's asking us what method the author decided to use
- 00:30
in lines eight through ten in order to evoke
- 00:33
some mental or emotional reaction
- 00:35
from the reader.
- 00:36
Be careful, there may be a madness to his method.
- 00:39
All right, so let's look at lines eight through ten.
- 00:42
"What men or gods are these?
- 00:44
What maidens loth?
- 00:45
What mad pursuit?
- 00:47
What struggle to escape?
- 00:49
What pipes and timbrels? What wild ecstasy?"
- 00:52
Ooh.
- 00:52
Well, before we even begin to think about literary devices,
- 00:55
one thing should leap out at us immediately.
- 00:57
Like some creepy guy hiding in a bush.
- 00:59
Every sentence starts with the word "what."
- 01:02
What? Why?
- 01:04
Well, it just so happens that there's a name for
- 01:06
a rhetorical device where a word or group of words is used
- 01:09
to start a bunch of sentences in a row.
- 01:12
Anaphora. Which is option C.
- 01:14
And as long as we're familiar with the term, well, this question
- 01:17
is just a cinch.
- 01:18
But let's go ahead and see why we can rule out the other answer choices anyway.
- 01:22
There's no reference to famous people or historical events,
- 01:25
so there's definitely no allusion here.
- 01:27
An allegory is like a fable and it's tough to communicate
- 01:30
an entire fable or parable in just three lines
- 01:33
of poetry, so that's gone.
- 01:34
Yusaf tried and failed and he got horrendous grades
- 01:37
in his poetry class.
- 01:38
Nothing is being referred to by the name of something
- 01:41
associated with it, so metonymy is a no.
- 01:44
And nothing is being compared in a symbolic way, so E is out, as well.
- 01:48
So, yeah, C - anaphora is the best answer,
- 01:51
the best solution, the best choice, the best option.
- 01:55
We just did anaphora-ed you and you didn't even notice.
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