Use of recurring words - 'somebody who' [closed]

Think of somebody who takes you for granted, somebody who is treating you with disgust, somebody who thinks about you as a thing to use.

Is that sentence well written? I mean the recurring part 'somebody who'- this isn't typical in English, is it? How can we write something meaning the same in other words? And is the quotation is understandable somehow...?


The repetition of "somebody who" is an example of the rhetorical device known as anaphora.

An anaphora is a rhetorical device in which a word or expression is repeated at the beginning of a number of sentences, clauses, or phrases. A well-known example of this may be found in the speech given by Winston Churchill to the House of Commons on June 4th, 1940: "We shall fight in France, we shall fight on the seas and oceans, we shall fight with growing confidence and growing strength in the air…"

Merriam Webster

It is the repetition of a word or phrase at the beginning of every clause. The repetition emphasises and gives force to the concept of somebody who ...