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
Descriptions
Dactyl
A metrical foot with one stressed syllable followed by two unstressed syllables; common in classical and English poetry.
Dactylic hexameter
A classical epic meter of six dactyls per line, used in ancient Greek and Latin epic poetry.
Diacope
Repetition of a word or phrase separated by one or two intervening words for emphasis or emotion.
Diaeresis
A prosodic device separating adjacent vowels into different syllables or marking a metrical break in verse.
Diaphora
Repetition of a word or name used in different grammatical or semantic roles to emphasize or clarify.
Dialogue
Conversation between characters used to reveal personality, advance plot, and provide exposition.
Dialogism
A concept (Bakhtin) where texts contain multiple, often conflicting voices and perspectives.
Diction
An author’s selection of words and phrasing that shapes tone, clarity, and voice.
Denotation
The direct, dictionary meaning of a word, often contrasted with its connotations.
Denouement
The story’s final phase where plotlines are resolved and outcomes revealed.
Deus ex machina
An unexpected, often contrived intervention that resolves a story’s conflicts abruptly.
Didacticism
Literature intended primarily to instruct or teach moral, practical, or ethical lessons.
Dialect
Use of region-specific vocabulary and grammar to convey character, setting, or authenticity.
Digression
A temporary departure from the main narrative to provide commentary, background, or reflection.
Direct characterization
When a narrator plainly states a character’s traits instead of revealing them through actions or speech.
Dramatic irony
When readers or viewers know crucial information that characters do not, creating tension or poignancy.
Dramatic monologue
A poem in which a single speaker addresses a silent listener, revealing character through speech.
Distich
A pair of lines of verse often forming a complete thought or epigram.
Double entendre
A phrase with two interpretations, typically one innocent and one risqué or ironic.
Double rhyme
Rhyme involving two or more syllables, giving a sing-song or light effect.
Double plot
A narrative that follows two main plots that mirror, contrast, or intersect.
Dissonance
Deliberate use of clashing, discordant sounds to create tension, discomfort, or emphasis.
Doggerel
Loose, irregular, often humorous or trivial poetry characterized by forced rhyme and meter.
Doppelgänger
A character’s double or alter ego used to explore identity, otherness, or psychological conflict.
Dysphemism
Choosing a blunt, offensive, or negative term over a neutral one for rhetorical effect.
Decorum
The principle that form, tone, and style should suit the subject, audience, and occasion.
Deixis
Words (this, that, here, now) whose meanings rely on speaker, time, and place context.
Decasyllabic
A line of verse composed of ten syllables, commonly used in formal English verse.
Decasyllabic (alternate entry)
Ten-syllable poetic line; typical of many English dramatic and narrative poems.
Dimeter
A line of verse with two metrical feet, used for brevity, emphasis, or rhythmic variation.
Defamiliarization
Presenting familiar things in unexpected ways so readers perceive them anew.
Dead metaphor
A metaphor used so often it loses figurative force and is treated as a literal expression.
Dramatization
Turning events, ideas, or emotions into a dramatic scene to enliven and concretize them.
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