1、 Figures of Speech/Rhetorical Devices I. Introduction By figures of speech we refer here to those rhetorical devices termed tropes in classical rhetoric. Tropes have to do with the way words are made to mean other than what they would normally imply, and therefore involve deviation from the ord
2、inary and literal meaning of words. They are ways of making our language figurative. A knowledge of the figures, and of how they are best used will be of help to us not only in deepening our understanding of what we read, but also in appreciating more fully the finer points of a writer’s style. In
3、 the process, we might even learn to write better ourselves. The number of figures ranged from 65 to 200 in classical times. We will only choose those that are of most universal appeal, and of the greatest practical value. II. Simile and metaphor 1. simile: It is a comparison between two dist
4、inctively different things and the comparison is indicated by the word as, like, as if, than. A simile is made up of three parts, the tenor, the vehicle, and the indicator of resemblance or simile marker. A simile is a figure of speech which makes a comparison between two unlike elements having at
5、 least one quality or characteristic in common. The comparison is purely imaginative, that is, the resemblance between the two unlike things in that one particular aspect exists only in our minds, in our “inward eye” and not in the nature of the things themselves. To make the comparison, words like
6、as, as … as, as … so, like, as if, as though, similar to, to bear a resemblance to, and comparative structure, prepositional phrases, and other collocations are used to transfer the quality we associate with one to the other. Sometimes the association is between unfamiliar and familiar things, or be
7、tween abstract and concrete images. The stronger the association that is felt, the greater the force of the comparison, the stronger the power of suggestion and the sharper the image produced. 1) like a. And then the whining schoolboy, with his satchel and shining morning face, creeping like snai
8、l unwillingly to school … (Shakespeare) b. He was like a cock who thought the sun had risen for him to crow. c. Records fell like ripe apples on a windy day. d. Mother was short and plump and pretty. Her eyes were blue, and her brown hair was like a bird’s smooth wings … e. Habit may be like
9、ned to a cable; every day we weave a thread, and soon we cannot break it. 2) as a. Men fear death, as children fear to go in the dark: and as that natural fear in children is increased with tales, so is the other. b. As the lion is king of beasts, so is the eagle king of birds. 3) as if, as th
10、ough a. She spoke hurriedly, as if her heart had leaped into her throat at the boy’s words. b. He was a beautiful horse that looked as though he had come out of a painting by Velasquez. 4) what a. Reading is to the mind what exercise is to the body. b. What salt is to food, that wit and humou
11、r are to conversation and literature. 5) than a. He has no more idea of money than a cow. b. A home without love is no more than a body without a soul. 6) and a. A word and a stone let go cannot be recalled. b. Love and cough cannot be hid. 7) with a. With the quickness of a long ca
12、t, she climbed up into the nest of cool-bladed foliage. 2. metaphor: It is the use of a word which originally denotes one thing to refer to another with a similar quality. It is also a comparison between two distinctively different things, but the comparison is implied, not expressed with the wor
13、d as or like. Metaphor is also called Condensed Simile. Metaphors are used not only after verb to be, and not only nouns can be used metaphorically, adjectives, adverbs, verbs can also be used metaphorically. 1) n. a. The parks are the lungs of our city. b. Money is a lens in a camera. 2) v. a
14、 Applications for jobs flooded the Employment Agency. 3) adj. a. The mountainous waves swallowed up the ship. 4) of phrase the bridge of friendship, the valley of despair, a flower of a girl III. Analogy, allegory, metonymy, synecdoche and allusion 1. analogy It is also a form of comparison
15、 but unlike simile or metaphor, which usually concentrates on one point of resemblance, analogy draws a parallel between two unlike things that have several common qualities or points of resemblance. Analogy is chiefly used for the purpose of persuasion or for the explanation or exposition of an id
16、ea. Analogy could be a simile or a metaphor, it is a combination of different figurative usages. a. “The chess-board is the world; the pieces are the phenomena of the universe; the rules of the game are what we call the laws of Nature. The player on the other side is hidden from us. …” b. It’s wi
17、th our judgments as with our watches; none go just alike, yet each believes his own. c. Judicious praise is to children what the sun is to flowers. d. The inspiration for a story is like “a pull on the line… the outside signal that has startled or moved the creative mind to complicity and brought
18、 the story to active being…” Analogy looks like simile in form, but the difference is: analogy provide the reason for the differences while simile and metaphor remain unexplained. 2. allegory: It is a milder figurative use than metaphor, it applies concrete images to illustrate abstract notion
19、s, it leads the readers to get to the nature of things or profound concepts through concrete images and easy facts. a. No rose without a thorn. b. It’s time to turn swords into ploughs. Names of books: Pilgrim’s Progress; Animal Farm Many allegories come from classical myths, some English prover
20、bs and idioms are good examples of allegory. All that glisters is not gold. (from The Merchant of Venice) 3. metonymy: It is substituting the name of one thing for that of another with which it is closely associated. There are four kinds: 1) the container for things contained (bottle for wine
21、 kettle for water, pot for soup) a. The kettle is boiling. 2) the instrument for the agent (pen—writing, gun/sword—fighting) a. The pen is stronger than the sword. 3) the sign (cradle—childhood, crown—king, throne—king) a. He must have been spoilt from the cradle. b. The grey hair should be
22、 respected. c. What is learned in the cradle is carried to the grave. d. Having finished the law school, he was called to the Bar. e. She has the eye for the fair and the beautiful. 4) others Journalists often use metonymy to refer to all kinds of people or things. It is very brief and humorous
23、 a. Romeo: lover b. Helen: beautiful woman c. John Bull: England/ the English people d. Downing Street: the British government/cabinet e. The Pentagon: the U.S. military establishment f. Big apple: New York 4. synecdoche: When a part is substituted for the whole or the whole is substitute
24、d for a part, synecdoche is applied. (hand—man, bread—food, creature—woman) a. More hands (working men) are needed at the moment. b. We had dinner at ten dollars a head (each person). c. All the plants in the cold country are turning green in this smiling year (the spring). 5. allusion: It is a
25、 brief reference to a person, place, phrase, or event drawn from history or literature. Allusions are effective not because of the meaning of the words themselves but because of the associations or connotations that allusive words carry for the intelligent reader. The use of allusion allows poets to
26、 reinforce an argument by illustration, to compress complex ideas into brief phrases, and to suggest thoughts they may not wish to state directly. Names are the most common forms of allusion and the easiest to identity. There are different sources of allusions, like nursery rhymes, fairy tales, myth
27、s, legends, fables and literary works, etc. a. Cinderella: pretty girl, mistreated by stepmother but helped by fairy godmother to win her Prince Charming: a rags-to-riches theme. b. “Open Sesame”: code word to the treasure cave in story of Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves; the key to hidden treasure
28、s, knowledge, etc. c. Sour Grapes: a fox called the grapes it couldn’t reach sour. When we can’t get what we want, we often disparage it. d. Noah and his Ark e. Solomon: a wise man, who can judge between right and wrong, true and false. f. Judas: the disciple who betrayed Christ to his enemies f
29、or 30 pieces of silver. ★Exercises: Identify the figures of speech in the following sentences: a. In rivers the water that you touch is the last of that has passed and the first of that which comes: so with time present. (analogy) b. Greece was the cradle of western culture. (metaphor) c. Laugh
30、 and the world laughs with you; weep and you weep alone. (allegory) d. The city has it philharmonic but also its poverty. (metonymy) e. I took a last drowning look at the title as I gave the book into her hand. (metaphor) f. He was like a cock who thought the sun had risen to hear him crow. (simi
31、le—the suggestion of overwhelming conceit in the man) g. Then he cut me open and took out the appendix and stitched me up again. (synecdoche—cut his abdomen open) IV. Personification, zoosemy and onomatopoeia 1. personification: It is to treat a thing (including an animal) or an idea as if it w
32、ere human or had human qualities. It is also a kind of figurative usage, esp. a metaphor. a. The sun kissed the green fields. b. The youth were singing, laughing and playing the music instruments. The trees and flowers around them danced heartily as if touch by merry mood. c. The little goat wa
33、s so fussy that he often cried for wolf. d. Death feeds on his mute voice, and laughs at our despair. 2. zoosemy: It is to treat a person as a thing (including an animal, plant, lifeless thing, abstract notion, etc.). a. His spoilt children are ill-gotten goods that’ll never prosper. b. “A lu
34、cky dog you are!” exclaimed Jim. c. Children are flowers of our country. d. O, my love is like a red, red, red rose. e. He slept like a log. 3. onomatopoeia: The formation of words that are like natural sounds. chortle, snigger, snore, mumble, cackle, baa, clink, clank, bump, boom, grumble,
35、crack, splash, buzz, hum, tinkle, chatter, rumble, hiss, smack, etc. V. Irony, paradox, oxymoron, innuendo, sarcasm 1. irony: It is the use of words which are clearly opposite to what is meant, in order to achieve a special effect. Words expressing the real meaning don’t appear in the sentence.
36、 a. It must be delightful to find oneself in a foreign country without a penny in one’s pocket. b. By midmorning a forty-one-year-old teacher had been shot dead, with his security card in hand, and another teacher struck by two nine-millimeter bullets, was extraordinarily lucky to be alive. Two ot
37、hers narrowly escaped Nicholas Elliot’s bullets. c. They are almost as wise as the wise men of Gotham. (a village of fools) 2. oxymoron: In oxymoron apparently contradictory terms are combined to produce a special effect. Words are contradictory, appearing in the sentence at the same time but th
38、ey might not be the same part of speech. a. living death b. tearful joy c. cold pleasant manner d. poor rich guys e. dully bright f. falsely true g. hasten slowly h. groan loudly i. love-hate relationship j. the sound of silence 3. pun and paradox: An ambiguous statement that is intende
39、d to be humorous is called a pun. Puns almost invariably attain their effect by using one of the thousands of word pairs in English (called homonyms) that are identical in sound and spelling but different in meaning. a. You will go nuts for the nuts you get in Nux. (an ad.) b. Try our sweet corn.
40、You’ll smile from ear to ear. c. Drunk drivers put the quart before the hearse. d. Why is an empty purse always the same? Because there is never change in it. e. We would like very much to have you for dinner. Just as a pun is a form of ambiguity that plays on words, a paradox plays on ideas. I
41、n general, a paradox involves a contradiction between the physical or material meaning of words and their spiritual, emotional, or supernatural connotation. a. More haste, less speed. b. In fact, it appears that the teachers of English teach English so poorly largely because they teach grammar so
42、 well. c. Paradoxically, the faster he tried to finish, the longer it seemed to take him. 4. innuendo: It is a mild form of irony, hinting in a rather roundabout way at something disparaging or uncomplimentary to the person or subject mentioned. a. “The weatherman said it would be warm. He mus
43、t take his readings in a bathroom.” (The author is hinting at the inaccuracy of the weatherman’s weather report. The weather is cold, rather than warm.) b. Have you finished my book yet? Sorry, I stopped at page 412, with 40 pages to go. 5. sarcasm: It is just the opposite of innuendo. It attac
44、ks in a taunting and bitter manner, and its aim is to disparage, ridicule and wound the feelings of the subject attacked. a. “In the evening the poor wounded boy was taken to that experienced doctor, who by applying some poisonous concoction of crushed leaves to his left eye, succeeded in blinding
45、him!” b. When children call a boy “Four Eyes” because he wears glasses, they are speaking in sarcasm. VI. Hyperbole, understatement, euphemism 1. euphemism: It is the substitution of a mild or vague expression for a harsh or unpleasant one. a. garbageman— G-man b. butcher —meat technologist
46、 c. lavatory—bathroom, restroom, washroom, ladies’/gentlemen’s room d. fat— plump/overweight e. third class—business class, economic class f. die—pass away g. old— to be elderly/senior h. pregnant— to be expecting i. mean—economic/thrifty 2. overstatement/hyperbole—understatement: In ove
47、rstatement the diction exaggerates the subject, and in understatement the words play down the magnitude or value of the subject. Overstatement: a. For she was beautiful—her beauty made The bright world dim, and everything beside Seemed like the fleeting image of a shade. b. Only here can you ha
48、ve such jeans of the best quality and the lowest price at downtown. Understatement: a. Sorry, this is in fact more than I can promise. b. The piece of work is nothing to be proud of. c. If this regime is out of power, no tear in to be shed. 3. litotes: A way of expressing a thought by its op
49、posite, esp. with words like not or no. a. From his mouth flowed speech sweeter than honey. b. They almost died laughing. c. That’s no laughing matter. (That’s a serious matter.) d. She was not without ambition. VII. Alliteration, assonance, consonance 1. alliteration: It refers to the appe
50、arance of the same initial consonant sound in two or more words. promise, problem and provision; as proud as a peacock 2. assonance: It is the repetition in two or more nearby words of similar vowel sounds (chalk wall fall). The rain in Spain stays mainly in the plain. 3. consonance:
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