Antistrophe

/ænˈtɪstrəfi/ noun

In ancient Greek poetry, the second part of a choral ode that responds to and mirrors the structure of the strophe; more generally, a reversal or opposite turning.

From Greek anti (against, opposite) + strophe (a turning, from strepein, to turn). Originally a performance feature of Greek drama, later applied metaphorically to rhetorical and poetic structures.

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