And what is the sound of the birch’s bark?
figure of speech
Answers
Answer:
The answer is Onomatopoeia
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Answer:
The figure of speech in the mentioned event i.e. the sound of the birch's bark, is Onomatopoeia.
Explanation:
In common parlance, a figure of speech is a word or phrase that means more or something different than what it appears to mean, the opposite of a literal expression. As Professor Brian Vickers observed: "It is sad evidence of the decline of rhetoric that the phrase 'an idiom' has come to have a false, illusory, or disingenuous meaning in modern colloquial English."
In rhetoric, an idiom is a kind of Imagery (such as metaphor, irony, understatement, or anaphora) that deviates from traditional word order or meaning. Some common idioms are alliteration, anaphora, anti-metabolic, antithesis, apostrophe, assonance, hyperbole, irony, metonymy, onomatopoeia, paradox, personification, pun, simile, synecdoche, and understatement.
Onomatopoeia: is a way of speaking in which the sounds of words convey meaning. An example of onomatopoeia can be seen in the poem when ice-covered branches collide with each other, creating a snapping sound.
“…They click upon themselves”.
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