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Drag each label to the correct category. Match the quotes with the literary devices they use. "O miserable abundance, O beggarly riches!" – John Donne "What a pity that youth must be wasted on the young." – George Bernard Shaw

User Wilkas
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Answer:

"O miserable abundance, O beggarly riches!" – John Donne ➡️ Oxymoron

"What a pity that youth must be wasted on the young." – George Bernard Shaw ➡️Paradox

Step-by-step explanation:

The literary devices are oxymoron and paradox.

Oxymoron is known as a rhetoric device which is usually self-contradicting; the words seem to contradict each other.

Like the sentence: "O miserable abundance, O beggarly riches!", An abundance that is miserable is self-contradictory. "Beggarly" means that there is lack and poverty. But yet riches is attached. So, it's an oxymoron.

Paradox is known to be a logically self-contradictory statement. It tends to go against common sense but yet somehow it looks true.

The sentence: "What a pity that youth must be wasted on the young." - youth has to do with being young but yet the statement says it is wasted on the young; that's self-contradictory but can be true.

User Keeleon
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