Mom and Dad often get up early on Saturdays to go to yard sales.
B.
My parents do not like to spend extra money on name-brand items.
C.
Wherever we can find the best prices.
D.
Once, they found a chair in excellent condition for a great price.
My father said that he gave up smoking.
This is a very good example of anaphora that is used in highly emotional passages for its emphatic and unifying characteristics. In this example we have Senator Margaret Chase, addressing Congress to speak against McCarthyism in 1950: " I speak as briefly as possible because too much harm has already been done with irresponsible words of bitterness and selfish political opportunism. I speak as simply as possible because the issue is too great to be obscured by eloquence. I speak simply and briefly in the hope that my words will be taken to heart." A person who is eloquent is paying more attention to the way they are speaking rather than the content itself. Here, an urgent matter can not wait for politeness. Usually polititians who want to hide something or distract the audience speak more eloquently even using verse sometimes. The point is that some issues are so grave and urgent that eloquence is not neccessarty when talking about them.
Once home to the most advanced civilization on Earth, the city of Atlantis is now an underwater kingdom ruled by the power-hungry King Orm. With a vast army at his disposal, Orm plans to conquer the remaining oceanic people -- and then the surface world. Standing in his way is Aquaman, Orm's half-human, half-Atlantean brother and true heir to the throne. With help from royal counselor Vulko, Aquaman must retrieve the legendary Trident of Atlan and embrace his destiny as protector of the deep.