Anadiplosis

anadiplosis, (Greek: “doubling” or “repetition,”) a device in which the last word or phrase of one clause, sentence, or line is repeated at the beginning of the next. An example is the phrase that is repeated between stanzas one and two of John Keats’s poem “The Eve of St. Agnes”

This is part of the “What are words for?” project.

This word scored a seven on a three part scale of allusiveness, political oomph and cultural capital (min score 1, max score 3 for each part of the scale)

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