Saturday, March 16, 2019
Repetition, Diction, and Simile in Cormac McCarthyââ¬â¢s The Crossing Essay
Repetition, Diction, and Simile in Cormac McCarthys The Crossing In Cormac McCarthys novel The Crossing, there is a dramatic sequence set forth by the narrator. The author uses many different techniques to convey the impact of the mother on the narrator. Some of these such techniques are repetition, diction, and simile. Of the aforementioned techniques, the most frank is repetition. The author uses the member and a total of thirty-three times. However, the simple fashion of the word is not what is to be noticed. It is the placement of the word that is interesting. In sentences in which there is mention of the wolf, the word and is used twenty times. This amount is one hundred fifty% higher than the amount of times the author chose to include the word and in sentences which did not mention the wolf. There are times in which it would be just as easy, if not easier, for the author to leave out the word and. For example, McCormac could have said he touched the cold, perfec t teeth. However, and was again squeezed in for the purpose...
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