Epanalepsis is a rhetorical device where a word or phrase is repeated at the beginning and the end of a sentence or clause. There are several synonyms for epanalepsis, including anadiplosis, which repeats the last word of a clause at the beginning of the next one, and epiphora, which repeats a word or phrase at the end of successive clauses or sentences. Another similar device is anaphora, which repeats a word or phrase at the beginning of successive clauses or sentences. Chiasmus is an inverse parallelism, where the second half of a phrase is a mirrored reflection of the first. Finally, Antanaclasis is a word or phrase repeated but with a different meaning each time.