explain all literally devices.?
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When an author sits to write a story, she doesn't simply write what happened. Instead, she uses what are called literary devices which are narrative techniques that add texture, energy, and excitement to the narrative, grip the reader's imagination, and convey information.
While there are literally hundreds of literary devices at an author's disposal, what follows are a handful of the most common.
While there are literally hundreds of literary devices at an author's disposal, what follows are a handful of the most common.
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Allusion:-An allusion is when an author refers to the events or characters from another story in her own story with the hopes that those events will add context or depth to the story she's trying to tell.
Diction:-Diction refers to an author's choice of words. When describing the events of her story, an author never has just one word at her disposal.
Epigraph:-Reading literature, you may have come across a work where the author under the title has included a quotation from some other work; often the quotation is in italics.
Diction:-Diction refers to an author's choice of words. When describing the events of her story, an author never has just one word at her disposal.
Epigraph:-Reading literature, you may have come across a work where the author under the title has included a quotation from some other work; often the quotation is in italics.
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