Entertainment / Literature / Hyperbaton: A generic term for changing the normal or expected order of words--including anastrophe, tmesis, hypallage, and other figures of speech. E.g.,'One ad does not a survey make.' The term comes from the Greek for 'overstepping' because one or more words 'overstep' their normal position and appear elsewhere. For instance, Milton in Paradise Lost might write, 'High on a throne of royal gold . . . Satan exalted sat.' In normal, everyday speech, we would expect to find, 'High on a throne of royal gold . . . Satan sat exalted.'
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Entertainment / Literature / Hypallage: Combining two examples of hyperbaton or anastrophe when the reversed elements are not grammatically or syntactically parallel. It is easier to give examples than to explain hypallage. Virgil writes, ' MORE
Entertainment / Literature / Anastrophe: Inverted order of words or events as a rhetorical scheme. Anastrophe is specifically a type of hyperbaton in which the adjective appears after the noun when we expect to find the adjective before the MORE