Here you’ll find 33 Literary devices that start with D, organized from “Dactyl” to “Dysphemism”. These entries cover names, sound patterns, and rhetorical moves commonly used in poetry, fiction, and criticism.
Literary devices that start with D are techniques and labels writers use to shape sound, meaning, and emphasis. Many trace their names to Greek and Latin roots, reflecting classical influence on literary study.
Below you’ll find the table with Device, Definition, and Example.
Device: The name of each literary term, which you can use to search, sort, or cite in your work.
Definition: A concise explanation of what the device does and how you recognize it in text.
Example: A brief contextual sentence that shows the device in action, so you can use or teach it.
Literary devices that start with D
Device | Alternate names | Category | Example |
---|---|---|---|
Dactyl | Dactylic foot | Meter | Half a league, half a league… |
Dactylic hexameter | Epic dactyl meter | Meter | Homeric epic lines |
Diacope | Repetition with interruption | Rhetoric | The horror! Oh, the horror! |
Diaeresis | Vowel separation; prosodic break | Poetics | lion pronounced li-on |
Diaphora | Name repeated with different sense | Rhetoric | John, my friend John |
Dialogue | Direct speech; conversation | Structure | Two friends arguing in a novel |
Dialogism | Multiple interacting voices | Theory/structure | Novel with many conflicting voices |
Diction | Word choice | Style | Formal diction in academic essays |
Denotation | Literal meaning | Semantics | Dog meaning the animal |
Denouement | Resolution; conclusion | Structure | After the trial the villain confesses |
Deus ex machina | God from the machine | Plot device | A stranger arrives and solves everything |
Didacticism | Didactic literature | Purpose/genre | A fable teaching honesty |
Dialect | Regional speech | Style/characterization | Character speaks in Appalachia dialect |
Digression | Authorial tangent | Structure | Narrator pauses to reflect on history |
Direct characterization | Telling (vs. showing) | Characterization | Narrator states “She was brave.” |
Dramatic irony | Audience knows more than characters | Irony/trope | We know the killer before the protagonist |
Dramatic monologue | Persona poem | Poetic form | My Last Duchess style speaker |
Distich | Couplet; two-line stanza | Poetic form | A two-line epigram concludes poem |
Double entendre | Pun with two meanings | Trope/rhetoric | Marriage is a fine institution. |
Double rhyme | Multisyllabic rhyme; feminine rhyme | Sound/rhyme | motion / “notion” |
Double plot | Parallel storylines | Structure | Two couples’ stories interweave |
Dissonance | Harsh sound juxtaposition | Sound | Jarring consonant clusters |
Doggerel | Comic, crude verse | Style/poetry | A clumsy limerick with simple rhyme |
Doppelgänger | Double or mirror character | Trope/motif | Protagonist meets his double |
Dysphemism | Harsh opposite of euphemism | Rhetoric | Loony bin for psychiatric hospital |
Decorum | Appropriateness of style | Rhetoric/style | Formal language in a solemn scene |
Deixis | Context-dependent reference words | Linguistics/semantics | I will go there tomorrow. |
Decasyllabic | Ten-syllable line | Meter | Iambic pentameter lines |
Decasyllabic (alternate entry) | Decasyllabic line | Meter | Shakespearean iambic pentameter example |
Dimeter | Two-foot line | Meter | Short two-foot poetic line |
Defamiliarization | Ostranenie; make strange | Technique | Describing walking as if first time |
Dead metaphor | Overused, literalized metaphor | Trope | Foot of the mountain |
Dramatization | Rendering as drama | Technique | Chapter reenacts a past event onstage |