symploce
English
    
    Etymology
    
From Ancient Greek συμπλοκή (sumplokḗ, “interweaving”).
Noun
    
symploce (plural symploces)
| Examples (repetition) | 
|---|
| The white man sent you to Korea, you bled. He sent you to Germany, you bled. He sent you to the South Pacific to fight the Japanese, you bled. - Malcolm X | 
-  (rhetoric) The repetition of one word or phrase at the beginning and another word or phrase at the end of successive phrases or clauses.
- Hypernyms: epanaphora, antistrophe
 - 1835, L[arret] Langley, A Manual of the Figures of Rhetoric, […], Doncaster: Printed by C. White, Baxter-Gate, →OCLC, page 77:- Symploce sometimes Anaphora will join
 With Epistrophe, and both in one combine.
 
 
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