Diction And Imagery In Popular Mechanics By Raymond Carver

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In the short story, Popular Mechanics, Raymond Carver applies specific diction and imagery to describe and symbolize the end of the affiliation between the man and the woman without saying so directly. Carver sneaks in terms and sentences that subliminally indicate the relationship’s status. The weather, mentioned early in the story, symbolizes how the “melting” relationship ends abruptly. Short sentences and the word “little” also describe the couple and their ending. These components give the reader more information on the relationship and how it concludes shortly. The beginning of the story shows how the relationship’s solidity quickly ends. He employs “Early that day the weather turned and the snow was melting into dirty water,” to the

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