Rhetorical purpose of an excerpt - English Language Proficiency Test

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1 Miss Brooke had that kind of beauty which seems to be thrown into relief by poor dress. 2 Her hand and wrist were so finely formed that she could wear sleeves not less bare of style than those in which the Blessed Virgin appeared to Italian painters…

3 Miss Brooke's plain dressing was due to mixed conditions, in most of which her sister shared. 4 The pride of being ladies had something to do with it: the Brooke connections, though not exactly aristocratic, were unquestionably "good:" if you inquired backward for a generation or two, you would not find any yard-measuring or parcel-tying forefathers—anything lower than an admiral or a clergyman; and there was even an ancestor discernible as a Puritan gentleman who served under Cromwell, but afterwards conformed, and managed to come out of all political troubles as the proprietor of a respectable family estate. 5 Young women of such birth, living in a quiet country-house, and attending a village church hardly larger than a parlor, naturally regarded frippery as the ambition of a huckster's daughter.

What literary technique appears in Sentence 2?

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Answer

In Sentence 2, the author is making a reference to a specific type of artwork: paintings “in which the Blessed Virgin appeared to Italian painters.” Allusion is just such a reference to another specific thing, place, or event. Alliteration is the repetition of similar sounds at the beginning of multiple words (e.g. “two torn tulips”). Epiphany is a sudden realization, often experienced by a character at the end of a short story, that changes someone’s life. Parallelism is the use of clauses with identical grammatical patterns, syntax, or meter. Metaphor is a comparison that does not employ “like” or “as.”

Passage adapted from George Eliot’s Middlemarch (1871)

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