Figures of speech of all the worlds a stage
Answers
Answer:
It's an extended metaphor.
Literary Devices
Shakespeare makes use of several literary devices in this speech. Some are:
Simile: ‘creeping like a snail”; “soldier… bearded like the pard”; etc.
Metaphor: The entire speech itself is more like symbolism; men and women are portrayed as players whereas life is portrayed as the stage. Shakespeare uses the “stage” as an extended metaphor.
Repetition: Another figure of speech used in this monologue; words like sans, age, etc. are repeated for the sake of emphasis.
Anaphora: It is used in the eighth and ninth lines, beginning with the word “And”.
Synecdoche: “Made to his mistress’ eyebrow”; “And then the justice”; etc.
Alliteration: “his shrunk shank”; “quick in quarrel”; etc.
Onomatopoeia: “pipes / And whistles in his sound”
Asyndeton: “Sans teeth, sans eyes, sans taste, sans everything.”
hope this will help you
mark me as brainlist