20 Handy Figures of Speech That We Never Heard About in School
One of the most popular pages at About.com Grammar & Composition is Top 20 Figures of Speech: definitions and examples of such terms as metaphor and metonymy, irony and understatement--all the rhetorical terms that you probably learned in school.
But what about some of the less familiar figures and tropes? There are hundreds of them after all (many collected in our Tool Kit for Rhetorical Analysis).
And while we may not recognize their names, we use and hear a good number of these devices every day.
So let's take a look at 20 uncommon words (most of them Latin or Greek) for some fairly common rhetorical strategies. To view examples of a device (along with its etymology and a guide to pronunciation), simply click on the term to visit a page in our glossary.
- Accismus
Coyness: a form of irony in which a person feigns a lack of interest in something that he or she actually desires. - Anadiplosis
Repetition of the last word of one line or clause to begin the next.
- Apophasis
Emphasizing a point by seeming to pass over it--that is, mentioning something while disclaiming any intention of mentioning it. - Aposiopesis
An unfinished thought or broken sentence. - Bdelygmia
A litany of abuse--a series of critical epithets, descriptions, or attributes. - Boosting
An adverbial construction used to support a claim or express a viewpoint more assertively and convincingly. - Chleuasmos
A sarcastic reply that mocks an opponent, leaving him or her without an answer.
- Dehortatio
Dissuasive advice given with authority. - Diatyposis
Recommending useful precepts or advice to someone else. - Epexegesis
Adding words or phrases to further clarify or specify a statement already made. - Epimone
Frequent repetition of a phrase or question; dwelling on a point. - Epizeuxis
Repetition of a word or phrase for emphasis (usually with no words in between). - Hypocrisis
Exaggerating the gestures or speech habits of another in order to mock him. - Paronomasia
Punning, playing with words. - Prolepsis
Figurative device by which a future event is presumed to have already occurred. - Skotison
Intentionally obscure speech or writing, designed to confuse an audience rather than clarify an issue. - Synathroesmus
The piling up of adjectives, often in the spirit of invective. - Tapinosis
Name calling: undignified language that debases a person or thing. - Tetracolon Climax
A series of four members, usually in parallel form.. - Zeugma
Use of a word to modify or govern two or more words although its use may be grammatically or logically correct with only one.
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