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Rhetoric in Queen Elizabeth Speech
Author(s) -
M. Rouzhi Aristha Nasution,
Alemina Br. Perangin-angin,
Mazlah Aini Siregar,
Siti Khairani Ritonga
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
talenta conference series. local wisdom, social, and arts
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2654-7066
pISSN - 2654-7058
DOI - 10.32734/lwsa.v4i2.1189
Subject(s) - hyperbole , simile , antithesis , alliteration , rhetoric , metonymy , metaphor , anaphora (linguistics) , synecdoche , linguistics , literal and figurative language , figure of speech , parallelism (grammar) , literature , rhetorical question , trickster , art , poetry , philosophy , computer science , rhyme , artificial intelligence , resolution (logic)
This study analyzes Queen Elizabeth's Rhetoric. The purpose of this research is to ascertain the types of rhetoric employed in Queen Elizabeth's Speech, specifically to ascertain the most prevalent type of rhetoric employed. The data for this study were analyzed using a descriptive qualitative approach. As a source of data, the researcher consulted a script. The researcher evaluated the script's sentences in order to assemble the data. They are as follows: Parallelism, Antithesis, Asyndenton, Alliteration, Anaphora, Metaphor, Metonymy, Simile, Personification, and Hyperbole. Queen Elizabeth used a variety of rhetorical styles. Personification was found to be 21%, Parallelism was found to be 15.7 percent, Alliteration was found to be 13.1 percent, Asyndenton was found to be 10.5 percent, Metaphor was found to be 10.5 percent, Hyperbole was found to be 10.5 percent, Anaphora was found to be 7.8%, Antithesis was found to be 5.2 percent, Metonymy was found to be 2.6 percent, and Simile was found to be 2.6 percent. According to the data above, a total of 21% of the speech had instances of personification. This suggests that personification is the most frequently employed type of rhetoric in Queen Elizabeth's speeches.

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