What literary device is demonstrated here: 'He is Romeo to her Juliet.'
Allusion.
15
'We shall fight in France. We shall fight on the seas and oceans. We shall fight on the beaches. We shall fight on the landing grounds. We shall never surrender.’
Anaphora
15
In the first scene of "Othello," we are introduced to Roderigo and Iago, who expresses anger over Othello's failure to promote him. We learn that Desdemona's father is a senator with the power to punish Othello for his "stealing" Desdemona.
Exposition
15
She put the key in her pocket. 'Who knows?' she said. 'Maybe this will be useful one day.'
Foreshadowing
15
'Wow. What a beautiful day.'
15
What perspective is this: Josh was worried about the test, but Mara wasn't. Angela hadn't even remembered it was happening. And Luke? Well, Luke was already planning how to fake an illness so he could avoid going to school the next day.
Omniscient narrator
15
'What am I even doing here?' sighed Jack.
Rhetorical question
15
'They think they’re crAzy but thEy ain‘t crAzy lets fAce it...'
Assonance.
15
Sadly, last Thursday, old Grandpa Brown went to a 'better place.'
Euphemism
15
I was so hungry I ate five burgers
Exaggeration
15
She died of embarrassment
Hyperbole
15
When an audience knows more than the character does. EG: Othello believes Desdemona is unfaithful to him, but the audience knows she is not.
Dramatic irony
15
A comparison between two things which are quite different. Doesn't use 'as' or 'like'. EG: 'There's daggers in men's smiles.'
Metaphor
15
Comparing two things that are not really like each other, using 'like' or 'as'. EG: My love is like a red, red rose.
Simile
15
A statement that seems impossible because it contains two opposing ideas that are both true. eg: In this rich country, there is a lot of poverty.
Paradox
15
A group of lines in a poem (like a 'paragraph' in prose)