an·a·di·plo·sis 
(
ăn
′ə-d
ə-pl
ōs
ĭs)
n. pl. an·a·di·plo·ses (-s
ēz)
Rhetorical repetition at the beginning of a phrase of the word or words with which the previous phrase ended; for example, He is a man of loyalty—loyalty always firm.
[Late Latin anadiplōsis, from Greek, from anadiploun, to redouble : ana-, ana- + diploun, to double (from diplous, double; see dwo- in the Appendix of Indo-European roots).]