Notes
›
Resources
Rhetoric & Style
Literary Devices
June 2026
9 devices
| Device | Greek | Etymology | Definition | Example | Effect | Family |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Enthymeme | ἐνθύμημα | en (in) + thymos (mind) — an argument held in the mind | A syllogism with one premise left unstated, to be supplied by the audience from shared belief or common assumption | “We cannot trust him — he lied before.” (Unstated: those who have lied before cannot be trusted.) | Creates complicity — the audience completes the argument themselves, making it feel self-evident rather than imposed | Logic |
| Diacope | διακοπή | dia (through) + koptein (to cut) — to cut through | Repetition of a word or phrase with one or more intervening words placed between its two occurrences | “Bond. James Bond.” / “To be, or not to be, that is the question.” (Shakespeare, Hamlet) | The gap between repetitions creates suspense; the return of the word lands harder than a direct echo | Repetition |
| Epizeuxis | ἐπίζευξις | epi (upon) + zeuxis (a yoking) — immediate yoking together | Repetition of a word or phrase in immediate succession, with no words intervening between the occurrences | “The horror! The horror!” (Conrad, Heart of Darkness) / “Words, words, words.” (Shakespeare, Hamlet) | Urgency and obsession — the word becomes a drumbeat, conveying an emotion too large for a single utterance | Repetition |
| Hysteron Proteron | ὕστερον πρότερον | hysteron (later) + proteron (earlier) — the later put before the earlier | Logical or temporal reversal: stating the later event before the earlier in an expression or argument | “Put on your shoes and socks.” / “Let us die, and rush into the thick of the fight.” (Virgil, Aeneid) | Foregrounds the final outcome or consequence, making it feel more vivid; can be darkly comic, poetically charged, or urgently emphatic | Logic |
| Hyperbaton | ὑπερβατόν | hyper (over) + bainein (to step) — to step over | Any intentional departure from standard syntactic word order; the umbrella term covering most figures of displacement and inversion | “Object there is none.” (Poe, The Tell-Tale Heart) / “This I must see.” / “Him I fear.” | The displaced element receives unexpected emphasis from its unusual position; creates rhetorical elevation and an air of formal artifice | Syntax |
| Anastrophe | ἀναστροφή | ana (back) + strephein (to turn) — to turn back | Inversion of the customary sequence of words within a clause, especially verb-before-subject or adjective-after-noun | “Speak the truth you must.” / “Into the forest deep they walked.” / “Good at this she was not.” | Creates an archaic or elevated register; the unexpected order forces a beat of attention onto the displaced term | Syntax |
| Hendiadys | ἓν διὰ δυοῖν | hen (one) + dia (through) + dyoin (two) — one thing through two | Expressing one complex idea through two coordinated nouns or adjectives, where one would normally modify the other | “Sound and fury” (= furious sound) (Shakespeare, Macbeth) / “bread and salt” (= salted bread) / “nice and warm” (= nicely warm) | Spreads emphasis equally across both terms simultaneously, producing a productive ambiguity that enriches rather than confuses meaning | Syntax |
| Polysyndeton | πολυσύνδετον | polys (many) + syndeton (bound together) — many bonds | Deliberate use of multiple conjunctions in close succession, well beyond what grammar or convention requires | “We shall fight on the beaches, and on the landing grounds, and in the fields, and in the streets, and in the hills.” (Churchill) | Accumulative and relentless — each addition feels inevitable; creates a sense of enumeration without end, overwhelming by sheer addition | Conjunction |
| Asyndeton | ἀσύνδετον | a (without) + syndeton (bound together) — without bonds | Deliberate omission of conjunctions between coordinated clauses, phrases, or words that would ordinarily be connected | “I came, I saw, I conquered.” (Caesar, Veni, vidi, vici) / “Friends, Romans, countrymen, lend me your ears.” | Speed, compression, decisiveness — each item stands alone as if self-sufficient; the list moves fast and feels authoritative | Conjunction |
No devices match.