An anaphora is a rhythmic pattern that is in a written work. Some songs that have an anaphora in them is If I Had by Eminem, Grillz by Nelly, Firework by Katy Perry and Pushing Me Away by Linkin Park.
Anaphoric pronouns refer "back" to an antecedent in the text. Examples * After Mary had sat down at her desk she started writing. * When Jim arrived he looked tired. Contrast with other kinds of reference, such as: * He's good at French, is our Fred. (Here he and our refer forward to something in the text. This is sometimes called cataphoric reference). * They are digging up the road again. (Here they does not refer to anything in the text, but to something outside. Instead, it is used vaguely in the sense of the powers that be. This is often called exophoric reference). Note that sometimes there are ambiguities relating to the antecedent. For example, "On receiving a new credit card, you should sign it at once". The pronoun you may mean either you (the reader) or a vague one (anyone).
When Cardi B states, "That's some wet-a$$ pu$$y. Now get a bucket and a mop. That's some wet-a$$ pu$$y. I'm talking WAP, WAP, WAP. That's some wet-a$$ pu$$y. Macaroni in a pot. That's some wet-a$$ pu$$y, huh" in her newly released song "WAP", she uses her magnificent lyrical talents, and "that big mac truck" to represent anaphora.
Anaphora and epistrophe are examples of parallelism.
Anaphors
An anaphora is a literary device in which the first part of a sentence is repeated throughout a poem or work of prose. Many psalms are examples of this literary device. An example, would be 'Deliver me lord from my enemies. Deliver me Lord from evil. Deliver me Lord from all that is not of you.'
The effect of the anaphora is that the directors of the inner party do not acknowledge the principle of doublethink. Their goal is to use the machine's products without making the standard of living better.
Anaphora is the repetition of a word or group of words at the beginning of successive clauses, sentences, or lines. Therefore, emphasis is placed on the word or phrase to create a variety of effects - mainly to get a message from the writer to the reader.
Anaphora and epistrophe are examples of parallelism.
I just got anaphora by her last night!
Ruslan Mitkov has written: 'Anaphora resolution' -- subject(s): Anaphora (Linguistics)
Nihil agis, nihil moliris, nihil cogitas. The anaphora is in the successive repetition of 'nihil.'
Anaphora is a rhetorical device used in writing and speech. It is a type of repetition that involves repeating a word or phrase at the beginning of successive clauses or sentences for emphasis or effect.
The cast of Anaphora - 2011 includes: Andreas Bendig Stephan Menzel Gehrke
Repetition.
Anaphors
Anaphora
Craige Roberts has written: 'Modal subordination, anaphora, and distributivity' -- subject(s): Anaphora (Linguistics), Comparative and general Grammar, Government-binding theory (Linguistics), Modality (Linguistics), Semantics, Syntax 'Modal subordination and pronominal anaphora in discourse' -- subject(s): Anaphora, Anaphora (Linguistics), English language, Modality, Modality (Linguistics)
kambing
Michael Chiou has written: 'NP-anaphora in modern Greek' -- subject(s): Modern Greek language, Noun phrase, Anaphora