Asked by Chuck Bass
Is this sentence “My only love sprung from my only hate” an allusion, hyperbole, personification, or a paradox
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Paradox.
The line presents two contradictory ideas—love and hate—together in a way that reveals a painful truth (Juliet loves someone who belongs to the family she must hate). It’s not an allusion (not referencing another work), not hyperbole (not an obvious exaggeration), and not personification (no nonhuman thing is given human traits).
The line presents two contradictory ideas—love and hate—together in a way that reveals a painful truth (Juliet loves someone who belongs to the family she must hate). It’s not an allusion (not referencing another work), not hyperbole (not an obvious exaggeration), and not personification (no nonhuman thing is given human traits).
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