ANTONOMASIA is a SD based on the usage of a common noun instead of a proper name & vice versa to characterize the person simultaneously with naming him – the so called “speaking names»: Lady Teasle, Miss Sharp, Mister Logic.
Every Caesar has his Brutus.
Table 8 Prof. Arnold’s classification of TROPES:
(Figures of Quantity)
Tropes
(Figures of Quality)
Irony
Epithet
Metaphor
(Personification)
Metonymy
(Synecdoche)
Antonomasia
Allegory Allusion
Litotes: a trope in which an affirmative is expressed by the negative or vice versa:
“It was not without a certain wild pleasure I ran before the wind (Jane Eyre).
Structural patterns of litotes:
1) the presence of the key-element “not”.
“It is not unreasonable.”
2) the key-element “too” + “not”.
“I am not too sure.”
3) the key-element “rather, pretty, scarcely, etc…”
Irony: opposition of what is said to what is meant:
“The garden bore witness to a love of growing plants which extended to many types commonly known as weeds. (J. Wain)
Epithet: a word (a group of words) carrying an expressive (emotive) characterization of an object described: “Full many a glorious morning have I seen..."
Epithets:
1) tautological: “green grass”
2) evaluative: “a pompously majestic female”
3) descriptive: “an unnaturally mild day”
4) metaphorical:”the smiling sun”
5) metonymical: “the sleepless pillow”
Oxymoron: a conjunction of seemingly contradictory notions: “And faith unfaithful kept him falsely true” (A.Tennison).
Hyperbole is an exaggerated statement not meant to be taken literally to express a highly emotional attitude towards the thing described: “He was all starch and vinegar.”
Zeugma: two homogeneous members grammatically, but semantically different, “Killing time with a book was not much better than killing pheasants and time with a gun.”
Semantically false chain is a variety of zeugma consisting of a number of homogeneous members, semantically disconnected, but attached to the same verb. It is based on the effect of defeated expectancy and produces a humorous effect. Ex.: “Babbitt respected bigness in anything: in mountains, jewels, muscles, wealth of words”. (S.L.)
Pun (play on words) is based on simultaneous realization of two meanings of a polysemantic
word or the usage of two homonyms in the same context:
- Have you ever seen him at the bar?
- Thousand times. He was a drunkard.
Prof. Galperin’s classification:
Lexical SD:
Table 9 Classification of Lexical Stylistic Devices (LSD)(I.R.Galperin, V.A.Kucharenko)
Interrelation of 2 Logical m-gs
Interrelation
Of Logical & Emotive
m-gs
Interrelation
Of Logical & Nominal
Interrelation of Logical &
Phrasal
m-gs
Metaphor
Metonymy
Irony
Epithet
Oxymoron
Hyperbole
Antonomasia
Zeugma
Pun
Semantically
False
Chain
Syntactical SD (SSD) – I.R.Galperin
Economy
of Lg elements
Redundancy
of Lg elements
Distribution
of Lg elements
Ellipsis
Aposiopesis
Asyndeton
Apokoinu
Construction
1. Reiteration
a) Ordinary
b) Anaphora
c) Epiphora
d) Framing
e) Anadiplosis
f) Chain r-n
g) Morphological r-n
2. Parallelism
3. Polysyndeton
4. Chiasmus
1. Inversion
a) Partial
b) Complete
c) Secondary
2. Rhetorical question
3. Detachment
4. Attachment
5. Suspense