- An
epiphrase (meaning "what it is said in addition", from
ancient Gr**** ἐπί/epí "in addition" and φράσις/phrásis "phrase") is a
figure of
speech that...
- miss it." - The
Great Gatsby. This can
moreover be a
manifestation of an
epiphrase, as
Daisy had
personally ****erted her own
opinion on her question. Depending...
-
rules or conventions. Epanalepsis:
ending sentences with
their beginning.
Epiphrase: one or more
sentences (typically of the author's understanding/expression...
- digression. Kishōtenketsu Spin-off (media)
Spiritual successor Gaiden Epiphrase Notes Harper, Douglas. "digression".
Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved...
-
Apposition Figure of
speech Golden line
Parenthesis Split infinitive Epiphrase Aubrey, Mike.
Discontinuous Syntax in the New
Testament part 3. Devine...
- of
theatrical evolution. Agon
Fourth wall
Parodos Unreliable narrator Epiphrase J E
Sandys ed., A
Dictionary of
classical Antiquities (London 1891) p...
-
introduced by the
narrator himself, by
means of
another figure of speech, the
epiphrase, as
opposed to the
hypotyposis which is self-sufficient and
seems closed...
- Alex,
television opera, Op. 56 (1982–1983)
Euphonie I , Op. 1 (1966)
Épiphrase, Op. 4 (1967)
Euphonie II, Op. 5 (1967) Minore, Op. 6 (1968) Koko maailma...