In rhetoric, antimetabole's the repetition of words in successive clauses, but in transposed grammatical order (for example, "I know what I like, and I like what I know"). It's similar to chiasmus although chiasmus doesn't use repetition of the same words or phrases. Examples Latin: Miser ex potente fiat ex misero potens Seneca the Younger, Thyestes, Act I.10 (let it make misery from power and power from misery). The Latinate expression of Parmenides philosophical thesis of immutability's rende… (More on Antimetabole)