Anaphora : (repeating a sequence of words at the beginnings of neighboring clauses)
Epiphora (repeating words at the clauses' ends)
worst case scenario and war-concept:
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Category: englishenglish

David Lammy Jeremy Corbyn

1.

David Lammy Jeremy Corbyn
Michael Gove
Noun
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102
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Verb
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Adjective
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19
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2.

David Lammy Jeremy Corbyn
Michael Gove
I
7
2
14
We
134
11
74
They
10
9
18

3.

Michael Gove:
In contrast, the In campaign want us to believe that Britain is beaten and
broken, that it can’t survive without the help of Jean-Claude Juncker and his
Commission looking after us and if we dare to assert ourselves then all the
terrors of the earth will be unleashed upon our head.
It’s a fact that also describes Austria-Hungary under the Habsburgs, the
Russian Empire under Nicholas the Second, Rome under its later Emperors or
the Ottoman Empire in its final years.
To cap it all, an alliance of Vladimir Putin, Marine Le Pen and Donald Trump,
emboldened by our weakness, would, like some geopolitical equivalent of
the Penguin, Catwoman and the Joker, be liberated to spread chaos
worldwide and subvert our democracy.
I sometimes think that the In campaign appears to be operating to a script
written by George R.R Martin and Stephen King - Brexit would mean a
combination of a Feast for Crows and Misery.
Britain has spoken, it’s said “oui” and now it had better shut up and suck it
up.

4.

Jeremy Corbyn:
[…] promises it won’t be “a Mad Max-style dystopia”, which you
might think was setting the bar a little bit low.
In contrast to the Prime Minister who said, “if you believe you’re a
citizen of the world, you’re a citizen of nowhere”.
We believe in fact that we can only fully achieve what we want to
as citizens of Britain by also recognising we are “citizens of the
world”.
David Lammy:
European migrants are not “citizens of nowhere” or “queue
jumpers” as the Prime Minister would have us believe.
Theresa May’s deal has emerged as a Frankenstein’s monster: an
ugly beast that no one voted for or wanted.

5.

Michael Gove:
It treats people like children, unfit to be trusted and easily scared by
ghost stories.
[…] is a fantasy, a phantom, a great, grotesque patronising and
preposterous Peter Mandelsonian conceit that imagines the people
of this country are mere children, capable of being frightened into
obedience by conjuring up new bogeymen every night.
David Lammy:
It is the same idea that motivates an angry teenager to run away
from their family.

6. Anaphora : (repeating a sequence of words at the beginnings of neighboring clauses)

Anaphora :
(repeating a sequence of words at the beginnings of neighboring clauses)
David Lammy:
Let me remind them: Churchill understood the European dream is to build a
whole bigger than the sum of its parts […] Let us now be honest with the
country.
Total independence is a fantasy. It is the same idea that motivates an angry
teenager to run away from their family. Total independence means throwing a
tantrum and ending up in the cold.
Total independence is selfishness […] Total independence will not solve our
problems. Total independence will lead to total isolation.
And let us be honest. Britain did not become “Great” in total isolation. Britain
thrived by becoming the biggest Treaty-Signing power in the world. Britain
thrived by signing more than 14,000 treaties in the modern age […]

7.

David Lammy:
To my good friends in the Party, those who are still wavering, I ask
honestly: can you really vote for this politics of division and hate?
Can you really vote to slash workers’ rights and protections?
Can you vote to give tax avoiders a sanctuary? Can you vote to
hand over more power to the clumsy hand of the market?
It forgets the lessons of Britain’s past.
It forgets the value of immigrants.
It forgets that we cannot build a new Empire by force.
It forgets that in the modern world our nation

8.

Michael Gove:
If we vote to stay the EU can then press ahead with the plans […]
If we vote to stay we also risk paying even more of the bills for the euro’s
failure […]
If we vote to stay, British taxpayers will inevitably be paying ever higher
bills for years to come […]
If we vote to stay we are not settling for the status quo - we are voting to
be a hostage, locked in the boot of a car driven by others to a place
and at a pace that we have no control over.
It could be invested in new infrastructure, apprenticeships and science.
It could be deployed in our NHS, schools and social care. It could pay for
tax cuts, enterprise allowances and trade missions. It could pay for
fourteen Astute Class Submarines.

9. Epiphora (repeating words at the clauses' ends)

Michael Gove:
For Greeks who have had to […] a different Europe will be a liberation.
For Spanish families whose children have had to endure years of
joblessness […] a different Europe will be a liberation.
For Portuguese citizens who have had to endure cuts to health […] a
different Europe will be a liberation.
For Italians whose elected Government was dismissed by Brussels fiat, for
Danes whose opt-out from the Maastricht Treaty has been repeatedly
overridden by the European Court, for Poles whose hard-won
independence has been eroded by the European Commission, a different
Europe will be a liberation.

10.

Michael Gove:
So leaving could mean control over new trade deals, control over
how we can help developing nations, control over economic rules,
control over how billions currently spent by others could be spent,
control over our borders, control over who uses the NHS and control
over who can make their home here.

11. worst case scenario and war-concept:

David Lammy:
A hope that our countries which fought and murdered each other
on an industrial scale, twice in one century, could come together. A
refusal to return to extreme nationalism. And a determination to
prevent more bloody conflicts where tens of millions are killed […]
And a refusal to submit to the tyranny of fascism, ever again.
After the Second World War, in 1946, Winston Churchill said […]
What did it say when Nigel Farage stood in front of a Nazi-inspired
poster of refugees, with the caption “breaking point”?
Brexit forgets why this continent came together, after two bloody
wars.

12.

Jeremy Corbyn:
It was alarming that after the Brexit vote there was a clear rise in xenophobic and
racist attacks on our streets […]
Michael Gove:
[…] our mobile telephones would no longer work. And heaven help us if we fell ill,
as citizens from a country outside the EU we would be barred from all of Europe’s
hospitals and left to expire unmourned in some foreign field.
Our football teams would be denuded of foreign players, so Premier league
matches would have to become - at best - five-a-side contests. And we’d better
not schedule those fixtures for dark evenings because there’d be no electricity left
for the floodlights after our energy supplies would had suffered a shock akin to the
meltdown of a nuclear power plant.
The City of London would become a ghost town, our manufacturing industries
would be sanctioned more punitively than even communist North Korea […]
[…] we would instantly become some sort of hermit kingdom, a North Atlantic
North Korea only without that country’s fund of international good […]
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