Read this excerpt from "Eavesdropping* from One Writer's Beginnings by Eudora Welty and answer the question.
When was young enough to still spend a long time buttoning my shoes in the morning, I'd listen toward the
hall: Daddy upstairs was shaving, in the bathroom, and Mother downstairs was frying the bacon. They would
begin whispering back and forth to each other up and down the stairwell. My father would whistle his phrase,
my mother would try to whistle, then hum hers back. I drew my buttonhook in and out and listened to it - I
know it was "The Merry Widow." The difference was, their song almost floated with laughter: how different
from the record, which growled from the beginning, as if the Victrola were only slowly being wound up. They
kept it running between them, up and down the stairs where I was now just about ready to run clattering
down and show them my shoes.
In the above excerpt Welty is using what literary device?
• sensory details
O hyperbole
O pathos
O alliteration

Respuesta :

The passage above uses parallelism.

The parallelism in the passage mentioned above includes the following: My father would whistle his line, [while my mother would attempt to whistle, "Mother downstairs was cooking the bacon."].

Grammarians refer to the arrangement of words with syntactically correct structure as parallelism. Making sentences have the same, or parallel, the structure is referred to as parallelism.

The use of parallelism in writing is crucial (and speaking, for that matter).

Writing well requires a parallel framework above everything else. Writing is awkward without it.

Enhancing consistency and coherence through parallel structure.

Learn more about parallelism here:-

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