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Consult Chambers 21st Century Dictionary, The Chambers Thesaurus (1996) or Chambers Biographical Dictionary (1997 edition with amendments). Enter your search and choose your title from the drop-down menu.

Search results for 'anaphora':

anaphora noun 1 rhetoric the repetition of a word or group of words at the start of a sequence of clauses, sentences, lines of poetry, etc. 2 grammar the use of another, usually smaller, unit of language to refer to something that has already been mentioned (the antecedent), eg in the sentence Peter isn't here - he left an hour ago, instead of repeating Peter, the pronoun he is used. anaphoric adjanaphoric reference.
ETYMOLOGY: 1930s in sense 2; 16c in sense 1: Greek, from ana back + pherein to bear.

anaphora noun 1 rhetoric the repetition of a word or group of words at the start of a sequence of clauses, sentences, lines of poetry, etc. 2 grammar the use of another, usually smaller, unit of language to refer to something that has already been mentioned (the antecedent), eg in the sentence Peter isn't here - he left an hour ago, instead of repeating Peter, the pronoun he is used. anaphoric adjanaphoric reference.
ETYMOLOGY: 1930s in sense 2; 16c in sense 1: Greek, from ana back + pherein to bear.

anaphora noun 1 rhetoric the repetition of a word or group of words at the start of a sequence of clauses, sentences, lines of poetry, etc. 2 grammar the use of another, usually smaller, unit of language to refer to something that has already been mentioned (the antecedent), eg in the sentence Peter isn't here - he left an hour ago, instead of repeating Peter, the pronoun he is used. anaphoric adjanaphoric reference.
ETYMOLOGY: 1930s in sense 2; 16c in sense 1: Greek, from ana back + pherein to bear.