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Stylistic Devices / Literary Terms

Stylistic Devices / Literary Terms

 

Alliteration (Alliteration, Stabreim)

Repetition of consonant sounds at the beginning of neighbouring words

Example: O wild west wind, …;

                Full fathoms five thy father lies, ..

Effect:     sound device, musical effect

 

Allusion (Anspielung)

A reference to a famous person or event; may be literary, historical, biblical, …

Example:

Effect: emphasis, to give credibility, to show off one´s education

 

Anaphora (Anapher)

The same word or expression is repeated at the beginning of 2 or more lines or sentences

Example: Did he smile his work to see?

                Did he who made the lamb make thee?

Effect: emphasis

 

Anticlimax

Often surprising descent from the important to the unimportant, normally in a series of statements

Example: He pawned his life, his watch and his word.

Effect: surprise, humour

 

Antithesis (Gegenüberstellung zweier Gedanken)

Contrasting statements are balanced against each other.

Example: To err is human, to forgive divine.

Effect: to create emphasis

 

Assonance (Gleichklang)

The repetition of the same or similar vowel sounds within stressed syllables or neighbouring words

Example: fate and lake

Effect: musical

 

Asyndeton (unverbundene Reihung von Satzgliedern)

Words are not linked by conjunctions; they are separated only by commas

Example: .. another poster, torn at one corner, flapped fitfully in the wind, … covering…

Effect: staccato-like

 

Chiasmus (Überkreuzung)

The syntactic structure is criss-crossed; inversion in second phrase of order in first phrase

Example: to stop too fearful, and too faint to go

Effect: emphasis

 

Climax

Words are arranged according to the value of their importance; the most important word is the climax.

Example: We strive for the good, aim for the better, and seize the best.

Effect: to increase tension, emphasize importance

Enjambment (Zeilensprung)

A sentence runs across 2 lines

Example: I wandered lonely as a cloud

                That floats on high oér vales and hills

Effect: fluent, flowing

 

Epipher

Repetition of one or more words at the end of two or more lines or sentences

Example: Whirl your pointed pines,

                 Splash your great pines   

Effect: emphasis (front and end positions are always emphasized)

 

Euphemism (Euphemismus)

A direct, unpleasant statement is replaced by an indirect, more pleasant one to avoid bluntness.

Example: to put an animal to sleep, instead of: to kill it because it is ill

Effect: to avoid bluntness, to be polite

 

Hyperbole (Übertreibung)

Example: Sue is extremely rich. She is rolling in money.

                I haven´t seen you for ages!

Effect: used for exaggeration; to attract the reader´s attention; to emphasize statements

 

Inversion (Umstellung von SPO)

Example: away they fly; up go the windows, out run the people, …

Effect: to emphasize or dramatize an event

 

Irony

A meaning is expressed that is the opposite of the intended one.

Example: the noble Brutus

Effect: ridicule; often didactic

 

Litotes

Understatement, often ironical, expressing an affirmative by the negative of its contrary

Example: she is not stupid (= she is quite clever)

Effect: emphasis

 

Metaphor

A figure of speech that implies more of a comparison than a direct impression (Without as or like!!)

Example: You are the wind beneath my wings.

Effect: emphasis; appeals to our imagination; creates a vivid picture in the reader´s mind

 

Metonymy

A word is substituted by another with which it is associated.

Example: crown stands for monarchy

Effect: visual effect

 

 

 

 

Onomatopoeia (Lautmalerei)

Word whose sound tries to imitate its meaning

Example: hum, buzz, crash, swish, cuckoo

Effect: sound device, creates an especially vivid impression

 

 

Oxymoron (scheinbarer Widerspruch)

Two contradictory terms are used together in a phrase.

Example: sweet death; wise fool; cruel love

Effect: provokes thoughts; emphasis

 

Paradox

A statement which is obviously absurd or contradictory, but has a deeper meaning

Example: The King is dead! Long live the King!

                So fair and foul a day I have not seen.  

Effect: thought-provoking

 

Parallelism

Arrangement of phrases, sentences or paragraphs, so that structure and/or meaning are similar; a form of repetition

Example: Cannon to the right of them,

                Cannon to the left of them,

                Cannon behind them

                Volleyed and thundered.

Effect: impresses the reader

 

Personification (Vermenschlichung)

Attributes a human quality to animals or inanimate things

Example: Justice is blind; dancing daffodils

Effect: to emphasize similarity

 

Portmanteau word (Kontamination)

Two words are used to form a new one.

Example: breakfast + lunch = brunch

 

Pun (Wortspiel)

A humorous play on words that sound similar, but have different meanings

Example: These sausages are unidentified frying objects.

                Is life worth living? That depends on the liver.

Effect: humour, fun

 

Repetition (Wiederholung)

Words or phrases are repeated.

Example: water, water everywhere

Effect: to emphasize; can seem monotonous

 

Rhetorical question

Asked for rhetorical effect, not expecting an answer

Example: A simple child, … What should it know of death? 

Effect: emphasis

 

Rhyme

Similarity or identity of vowels (several types: end-rhyme, cross-rhyme, embracing rhyme)

Example: In the drinking-well

                Which the plumber built her

                Aunt Eliza fell,     

                We must buy a filter.

Effect: musical

 

Simile (Vergleich mit like oder as)

Example: He runs like the wind.

Effect: conveys a vivid picture to the mind by linking up unrelated objects

 

Syllepsis (Zeugma)

One word modifies or governs others although it fits with only one.

Example: He took leave and his hat.

Effect: comical

  

Synaesthesia

Words describing different sensations (e.g. colour, smell, vision)

Example: murmuring light; cold colour

Effect: poetic; provokes thoughts; strikes as unusual

 

Synecdoche

Uses a part of something to refer to the whole

Example: He was sent behind bars (= prison)

Effect: vivid impression

 

Tautology (synonyme Wortwiederholung)

Superfluous repetition of words that does not clarify a statement

Example: to divide into four quarters

Effect: for emphasis

 

Schemes

 

    * accumulation: Summary of previous arguments in a forceful manner

    * adnomination: Repetition of a word with a change in letter or sound

    * alliteration: Series of words that begin with the consonant or sound alike

    * anacoluthon: Change in the syntax within a sentence

    * anadiplosis: Repetition of a word at the end of a clause at the beginning of another

    * anaphora: Repetition of the same word or group of words at the beginning of successive clauses

    * anastrophe: Inversion of the usual word order

    * anticlimax: Arrangement of words in order of decreasing importance

    * antimetabole: Repetition of words in successive clauses, in reverse order

    * antistrophe: Repetition of the same word or phrase at the end of successive clauses (see epistrophe)

    * antithesis: Juxtaposition of opposing or contrasting ideas

    * aphorismus: Statement that calls into question the definition of a word

    * aposiopesis: Breaking off or pausing speech for dramatic or emotional effect

    * apostrophe: Directing the attention away from the audience and to a personified abstraction

    * apposition: Placing of two elements side by side, in which the second defines the first

    * assonance: Repetition of vowel sounds, most commonly within a short passage of verse

    * asteismus: Facetious or mocking answer that plays on a word

    * asyndeton: Omission of conjunctions between related clauses

    * cacophony: Juxtaposition of words producing a harsh sound

    * cataphora: Co-reference of one expression with another expression which follows it (example: If you need one, there's a towel in the top drawer.)

    * classification (literature & grammar): Linking a proper noun and a common noun with an article

    * chiasmus: Word order in one clause is inverted in the other (inverted parallelism).

    * climax: Arrangement of words in order of increasing importance

    * commoratio: Repetition of an idea, re-worded

    * consonance: Repetition of consonant sounds, most commonly within a short passage of verse

    * dystmesis: A synonym for tmesis

    * ellipsis: Omission of words

    * enallage: Substitution of forms that are grammatically different, but have the same meaning

    * enjambment: Breaking of a syntactic unit (a phrase, clause, or sentence) by the end of a line or between two verses

    * enthymeme: Informal method of presenting a syllogism

    * epanalepsis: Repetition of the initial word or words of a clause or sentence at the end of the clause or sentence

    * epistrophe: Repetition of the same word or group of words at the end of successive clauses. The counterpart of anaphora (also known as antistrophe)

    * euphony: Opposite of cacophony - i.e. pleasant sounding

    * hendiadys: Use of two nouns to express an idea when the normal structure would be a noun and a modifier

    * hendiatris: Use of three nouns to express one idea

    * homographs: Words that are identical in spelling but different in origin and meaning

    * homonyms: Words that are identical with each other in pronunciation and spelling, but differing in origin and meaning

    * homophones:Words that are identical with each other in pronunciation but differing in origin and meaning

    * hypallage: Changing the order of words so that they are associated with words normally associated with others

    * hyperbaton: Schemes featuring unusual or inverted word order

    * hyperbole: Exaggeration of a statement

    * hysteron proteron: The inversion of the usual temporal or causal order between two elements

    * isocolon: Use of parallel structures of the same length in successive clauses

    * internal rhyme: Using two or more rhyming words in the same sentence

    * kenning: A metonymic compound where the terms together form a sort of anecdote

    * merism: Referring to a whole by enumerating some of its parts

    * non sequitur: Statement that bears no relationship to the context preceding

    * onomatopoeia: Word that imitates a real sound (e.g. tick-tock or boom)

    * paradiastole: Repetition of the disjunctive pair "neither" and "nor"

    * parallelism: The use of similar structures in two or more clauses

    * paraprosdokian: Unexpected ending or truncation of a clause

    * parenthesis: Insertion of a clause or sentence in a place where it interrupts the natural flow of the sentence

    * paroemion: Resolute alliteration in which every word in a sentence or phrase begins with the same letter

    * parrhesia: Speaking openly or boldly, or apologizing for doing so (declaring to do so)

    * perissologia: The fault of wordiness

    * pleonasm: Use of superfluous or redundant words

    * polyptoton: Repetition of words derived from the same root

    * polysyndeton: Repetition of conjunctions

    * pun: When a word or phrase is used in two different senses

    * sibilance: Repetition of letter 's', it is a form of alliteration

    * sine dicendo: A statement that is so obvious it need not be stated; when uttered almost seems pointless (e.g. 'You can never save too much')

    * superlative: Saying something the best of something i.e. the ugliest,the most precious

    * spoonerism: Interchanging of (usually initial) letters of words with amusing effect

    * symploce: Simultaneous use of anaphora and epistrophe: the repetition of the same word or group of words at the beginning and the end of successive clauses

    * synchysis: Interlocked word order

    * synesis: Agreement of words according to the sense, and not the grammatical form

    * synizesis: Pronunciation of two juxtaposed vowels or diphthongs as a single sound

    * synonymia: Use of two or more synonyms in the same clause or sentence

    * tautology: Redundancy due to superfluous qualification; saying the same thing twice

    * tmesis: Division of the elements of a compound word

 

[edit] Tropes

Main article: Trope (linguistics)

 

    * allegory: Extended metaphor in which a story is told to illustrate an important attribute of the subject

    * allusion: Indirect reference to another work of literature or art

    * anacoenosis: Posing a question to an audience, often with the implication that it shares a common interest with the speaker

    * antanaclasis: A form of pun in which a word is repeated in two different senses

    * anthimeria: Substitution of one part of speech for another, often turning a noun into a verb

    * anthropomorphism: Ascribing human characteristics to something that is not human, such as an animal or a god (see zoomorphism)

    * antimetabole: Repetition of words in successive clauses, but in transposed grammatical order

    * antiphrasis: Word or words used contradictory to their usual meaning, often with irony

    * antonomasia: Substitution of a phrase for a proper name or vice versa

    * aphorism: Tersely phrased statement of a truth or opinion, an adage

    * circumlocution: "Talking around" a topic by substituting or adding words, as in euphemism or periphrasis

    * commiseration: Evoking pity in the audience

    * correctio: Linguistic device used for correcting one's mistakes, a form of which is epanorthosis

    * denominatio: Another word for metonymy

    * double negative: Grammar construction that can be used as an expression and it is the repetition of negative words

    * dysphemism: Substitution of a harsher, more offensive, or more disagreeable term for another. Opposite of euphemism

    * epanorthosis: Immediate and emphatic self-correction, often following a slip of the tongue

    * enumeratio: A form of amplification in which a subject is divided, detailing parts, causes, effects, or consequences to make a point more forcibly

    * epanados: Repetition in a sentence with a reversal of words. Example: The Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath

    * erotema: Synonym for rhetorical question

    * euphemism: Substitution of a less offensive or more agreeable term for another

    * hermeneia: Repetition for the purpose of interpreting what has already been said

    * hyperbaton: Words that naturally belong together are separated from each other for emphasis or effect

    * hyperbole: Use of exaggerated terms for emphasis

    * hypophora: Answering one's own rhetorical question at length

    * hysteron proteron: Reversal of anticipated order of events; a form of hyperbaton

    * innuendo: Having a hidden meaning in a sentence that makes sense whether it is detected or not

    * invocation: Apostrophe to a god or muse

    * irony: Use of word in a way that conveys a meaning opposite to its usual meaning

    * kataphora: Repetition of a cohesive device at the end

    * litotes: Emphasizing the magnitude of a statement by denying its opposite

    * malapropism: Using a word through confusion with a word that sounds similar

    * meiosis: Use of understatement, usually to diminish the importance of something

    * merism: Statement of opposites to indicate reality

    * metalepsis: Referring to something through reference to another thing to which it is remotely related

    * metaphor: Stating one entity is another for the purpose of comparing them in quality

    * metonymy: Substitution of a word to suggest what is really meant

    * neologism: The use of a word or term that has recently been created, or has been in use for a short time. Opposite of archaism

    * onomatopoeia: Words that sound like their meaning

    * oxymoron: Using two terms together, that normally contradict each other

    * parable: Extended metaphor told as an anecdote to illustrate or teach a moral lesson

    * paradox: Use of apparently contradictory ideas to point out some underlying truth

    * paradiastole: Extenuating a vice in order to flatter or soothe

    * paraprosdokian: Phrase in which the latter part causes a rethinking or reframing of the beginning

    * parallel irony: An ironic juxtaposition of sentences or situations (informal)

    * paralipsis: Drawin...

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