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Repetition is the use of words, phrases, highlight their importance or to emphasize a message. In The Gettysburg Address, the words or even sentences several times in the text to consecrate, dedicated, devotion, dead, here, and nation are used repeatedly. The repetition of these words emphasizes President Lincoln's message that "we are to consecrate the ground here where the dead soldiers, whose devotion must also be characterized by the living in order to preserve this nation, have dedicated their lives." Parallelism, on the other hand, refers to the use of similar grammatical form or pattern for certain words, phrases, or sentences. Not only does parallelism emphasize a message, it also catches the audience's attention because of the rhythm it creates.
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Repetition is the use of words, phrases, highlight their importance or to emphasize a message. In The Gettysburg Address, the words or even sentences several times in the text to consecrate, dedicated, devotion, dead, here, and nation are used repeatedly. The repetition of these words emphasizes President Lincoln's message that "we are to consecrate the ground here where the dead soldiers, whose devotion must also be characterized by the living in order to preserve this nation, have dedicated their lives." Parallelism, on the other hand, refers to the use of similar grammatical form or pattern for certain words, phrases, or sentences. Not only does parallelism emphasize a message, it also catches the audience's attention because of the rhythm it creates.
Repetition is the use of words, phrases, highlight their importance or to emphasize a message. In The Gettysburg Address, the words or even sentences several times in the text to consecrate, dedicated, devotion, dead, here, and nation are used repeatedly. The repetition of these words emphasizes President Lincoln's message that "we are to consecrate the ground here where the dead soldiers, whose devotion must also be characterized by the living in order to preserve this nation, have dedicated their lives." Parallelism, on the other hand, refers to the use of similar grammatical form or pattern for certain words, phrases, or sentences. Not only does parallelism emphasize a message, it also catches the audience's attention because of the rhythm it creates.
Repetition is the use of words, phrases, highlight their importance or to emphasize a message. In The Gettysburg Address, the words or even sentences several times in the text to consecrate, dedicated, devotion, dead, here, and nation are used repeatedly. The repetition of these words emphasizes President Lincoln's message that "we are to consecrate the ground here where the dead soldiers, whose devotion must also be characterized by the living in order to preserve this nation, have dedicated their lives." Parallelism, on the other hand, refers to the use of similar grammatical form or pattern for certain words, phrases, or sentences. Not only does parallelism emphasize a message, it also catches the audience's attention because of the rhythm it creates.
Repetition is the use of words, phrases, highlight their importance or to emphasize a message. In The Gettysburg Address, the words or even sentences several times in the text to consecrate, dedicated, devotion, dead, here, and nation are used repeatedly. The repetition of these words emphasizes President Lincoln's message that "we are to consecrate the ground here where the dead soldiers, whose devotion must also be characterized by the living in order to preserve this nation, have dedicated their lives." Parallelism, on the other hand, refers to the use of similar grammatical form or pattern for certain words, phrases, or sentences. Not only does parallelism emphasize a message, it also catches the audience's attention because of the rhythm it creates.