Stylistics of FL
Stylistics of FL
Stylistics of FL
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the transfer of meaning, when a word (or a combination of words) is used to denote
an object which is not normally correlated with this word, and figures of speech
whose stylistic effect is achieved due to the unusual arrangement of linguistic
units, unusual construction or extension of utterance.
There is a considerable number of terms which can serve to denote different
tropes and figures of speech. Most of these terms go back to ancient rhetoric where
all the stylistic devices were thoroughly investigated and provided with names and
definitions. In the course of time some terms used in Greek and Roman philology
have disappeared whereas new ones were introduced. The meanings of some terms
have changed. Thus, the Greek "metaphora" was used by Aristotle in a very broad
sense, close to the modern meaning of the term "trope", that is, it embraced
metonymy, synechdoche, hyperbole and simile.
Theoretically speaking, the division into tropes and figures, which can be
traced back to classical philology, is characteristic not only of Russian but also of
English and American philological traditions. A Russian anglicist, however, is
bound to be faced with certain metalinguistic difficulties. The fact is that the
English term "figure of speech" is often indiscriminately used to denote any
stylistic device, including metaphor (this is how "metaphor" is defined, for
instance, in one of the dictionaries of literary terms published in the U.S.A.: "a
metaphor is a figure of speech in which one object is likened to another by
speaking of it as if it were that other" - Standard College Dictionary. N.-Y. # 1963).
The term "trope", which was widely employed in the XVIII century in almost the
same meaning as the Russian "", has practically fallen out of use.
Nevertheless we are convinced that the distinction between tropes and figures
is not only a question of metalanguage. It concerns the ontology of linguostylistic
phenomena, their essential features. We regard tropes and figures of speech as basic
linguostylistic categories whose study should be based on their numerous realitions
in speech.
Expressive means of a language are those forms and properties that have the
potential to make the utterance emphatic or expressive. They dont change the
3
semantic structure. They only add some degree of emotive force to the utterance
structure. These can be found on all the levels phonetic, phonographical,
morphological, lexical or syntactical.
A stylistic device is a literary model in which semantic and structural
features are blended so that it represents a generalized pattern.
All stylistic devices belong to expressive means, but not all expressive
means are stylistic devices. Thus, phonetic phenomena, such as pitch, stress,
pausation, tempo are all expressive means without being stylistic devices: I do
know you. Im really angry with that dog of yours (Intensifiers). According to
Professor Galperin a stylistic device is such a generative model which through
frequent use in language is transformed into a stylistic device (e.g. metaphor). Its
like an algorithm used for an expressive purpose.
A convergence of expressive means and stylistic devices is the accumulation
of several expressive means and stylistic devices of the same or different levels of
language, promoting the same idea or emotion in the same context.
Essential Terms:
GRAPHON - intentional violation of the graphical shape of a word (or word
combination) used to reflect its authentic pronunciation. It represents blurred,
incoherent, careless pronunciation caused by young age, intoxication, ignorance of
the discussed theme or social, territorial, educational status: "De old Foolosopher,
like Hickey calls yuh, ain't yuh?"
ONOMATOPOEIA (SOUND SYMBOLISM) - the use of words whose sounds
imitate those of the signified object or action. It occurs when there is a
correspondence between the sound of a word and the sound or sense denoted by
the word i.e. when the word actually imitates or echoes the sound or sense it
stands for: Buzz, murmur, clatter, whisper, cuckoo
PARONOMASIA
use of the partial phonetic similarity of words different in meaning: A young man
married is a man that's marred (Shakespeare); Gentlemen wanted their bankers
prudent but not prudish.
SPOONERISM - a figure based on an interchange of initial sounds or syllables of
successive words, often designed for comic effect (called after Rev. Dr. W.A.
Spooner, a Professor of Oxford University, a noted perpetrator of spoonerisms):
You've hissed my mystery lessons, you've tasted the worm and you'll have to leave by
the town drain.
ALLITERATION - a figure of speech which consists in the repetition of the same
(esp. initial) consonant sound in words in close succession (usually in the stressed
syllables):
1) The fair breeze blew, the white foam flew,
The furrow followed free;
We were the first that ever burst
5
(S.T.Coleridge)
RHYTHM - The measured flow of words and phrases in verse or prose. In verse
measured alternation of accented and unaccented syllables, in prose the
alternation of similar syntactical patterns.
looked up at him and mimicked "All right, I'll give the caaads a break and
staaat playing." (N. M.)
9. "Whereja get all these pictures?" he said. "Meetcha at the corner. Wuddaya
think she's doing out there?" (S.)
10."Lookat him go. D'javer see him walk home from school? You're French
Canadian, aintcha?" (J. K.)
Exercise III. State the functions and the type of the following graphical
expressive means:
1. Piglet, sitting in the running Kanga's pocket, substituting the kidnapped Roo,
thinks:
this
"If
shall
is
take
never
flying
to
really
it." (M.)
6. His voice began on a medium key, and climbed steadily up till it reached a
certain point, where it bore with strong emphasis upon the topmost word, and then
plunged down as if from a spring board:
beds
flowery
9
on
skies
the
to
carried
be
I
Shall
of ease,
blood
throu'
sailed
and
prize
the
toe
fought
others
Whilst
7. "We'll teach the children to look at things. Don't let the world pass you by,
I shall tell them. For the sun, I shall say, open your eyes for that laaaarge sun"
(A. W.)
8. "Now listen, Ed, stop that, now. I'm desperate. I am desperate, Ed, do you
hear?" (Dr.)
9. "Adieu you, old man, grey. I pity you, and I de-spise you." (D.)
10. "ALL our troubles are over, old girl," he said fondly. "We can put a bit by
now for a rainy day." (S. M.)
10
REFERENCE LIST:
Galperin I. R. Stylistics. - Part III p.p. 123-135.
Kukharenko V. A. A Book of Practice in Stylistics. - p.p. 10-22
11
IRONY - a trope which consists in: a) the use of evaluative (meliorative) words in
the opposite meanings (cf. ENANTIOSEMY): Youre in complimentary mood
today, arent you? First you called my explanation rubbish and now you call me a
liar; b) worsening of the meliorative connotation of a word: Im very glad you
think so, Lady Sneerwell; c) the acquisition of a pejorative connotation by a nonevaluative word: Jack: If you want to know, Cecily happens to be my aunt.Algernon: Your aunt; Ironic use of words is accompanied by specific
suprasyntactic prosody.
ZEUGMA (a variant of SYLLEPSIS )- a figure of speech using a verb or adjective with
two nouns, to one of which it is strictly applicable while the word appropriate to the other is
not used: 1) to kill the boys and /destroy/ the luggage; 2) with weeping eyes and /grieving/
hearts.
PUN (or PLAY UPON WORDS) - a figure which consists in a humorous use of words
identical in sound but different in meaning, or the use of different meanings of the same
word: "What's the matter with the boy?" - exlaimed Wardle. "Nothen's the matter with me",
- replied Joe, nervously. "Have you been seeing any spirits?" - inquired the old gentleman.
"Or taking any?" - added Ben Allen.
INTERJECTIONS AND EXCLAMATORY WORDS are words we use when
we express our feelings strongly and which may be said to exist in
language as conventional symbols of human emotions. Heaven,
goodgracious!, dear me!, God!, Come o n ! , Look here!,
dear, by the Lord!, God knows!, Bless me!, Humbug! and many
others of this kind are not interjections as such; a better name for them would be
exclamatory words generally used as interjections, i.e., their function is that of
the interjection.
12
1. Lexical EMs & SDs based on the interaction of the nominative and contextually
imposed meaning:
a) metaphor
b) antonomasia
c) metonymy
d) irony
2. Lexical EMs & SDs based on the interaction of the nominative and the derivative
logical meaning:
a) zeugma
b) pun
3. Lexical EMs & SDs based on the interaction of the logical and the emotive meaning:
a) interjections and exclamatory words
b) epithets
c) oxymoron
II. In your books of either home reading or individual reading find
the above mentioned expressive means and stylistic devices and
comment upon their structure and stylistic function.
III. Do the following exercises:
Exercise I. Analyse the given cases of metaphor from all sides mentioned
above - semantics, originality, expressiveness, syntactic function, vividness and
elaboration of the created image. Pay attention to the manner in which two
objects (actions) are identified: with both named or only hint the
metaphorized one presented explicit:
1. And the skirts! What a sight were those skirts! They were nothing but vast
decorated pyramids; on the summit of each was stuck the upper half of a
princess. (A. B.)
2. She was handsome in a rather leonine way. Where this girl was a lioness,
the other was a panther-lithe and quick. (Ch)
3. He felt the first watery eggs of sweat moistening the palms of his hands.
14
(W. S.)
4. He smelled the ever-beautiful smell of coffee imprisoned in the can. (J. St.)
5. They walked along, two continents of experience and feeling, unable to
communicate. (W. G.)
6. Geneva,
mother
of
the
Red
Cross,
hostess
of humanitarian
(Ch.)
6. I crossed a high toll bridge and negotiated a no man's land and came to the
place where the Stars and Stripes stood shoulder to shoulder with the Union Jack.
(J. St.)
7. He made his way through the perfume and conversation. (I. Sh.)
Exercise III. Analyse various cases of play on words, indicate which type is
used, how it is created, what effect it adds to the utterance:
1. After a while and a cake he crept nervously to the door of the parlour. (A. T.)
2. There are two things I look for in a man. A sympathetic character and full lips. (I.
Sh.)
3. Dorothy, at my statement, had clapped her hand over mouth to hold down
laughter and chewing gum. (Jn. B.)
4. "Someone at the door," he said, blinking.
"Some four, I should say by the sound," said Fili. (A. T.)
5. He may be poor and shabby, but beneath those ragged trousers beats a
heart of gold. (E.)
6. Babbitt respected bigness in anything: in mountains, jewels, muscles, wealth
or words. (S. L.)
7. Men, pals, red plush seats, white marble tables, waiters in white aprons. Miss
Moss walked through them all. (M.)
8. My mother wearing her best grey dress and gold brooch and a faint pink flush
under each cheek bone. (W. Gl.)
9. "There is only one brand of tobacco allowed here - 'Three nuns'. None
today, none tomorrow, and none the day after." (Br. B.)
10. Good morning," said Bilbo, and he meant it. The sun was shining and the
grass was very green. (A. T.)
Exercise IV. In the following excerpts you will find mainly examples of
16
verbal irony. Explain what conditions made the realization of the opposite
evaluation possible. Pay attention to the part of speech which is used in
irony, also its syntactical function:
1. When the war broke out she took down the signed photograph of the Kaiser and,
with some solemnity, hung it in the men-servants' lavatory; it was her one
combative action. (E. W.)
2. From her earliest infancy Gertrude was brought up by her aunt. Her aunt had
carefully instructed her to Christian principles. She had also taught her
Mohammedanism, to make sure. (L.)
3. "Well. It's shaping up into a lovely evening, isn't it?"
"Great," he said.
"And if I may say so, you're doing everything to make it harder, you
little sweet." (D. P.)
4. Mr. Vholes is a very respectable man. He has not a large business,
but he is a very respectable man. He is allowed by the greater attorneys
to be a most respectable man. He never misses a chance in his practice
which is a mark of respectability, he never takes any pleasure, which is
another mark of respectability, he is reserved and serious which is another
mark of respectability. His digestion is impaired which is highly respectable.
(D.)
5. Several months ago a magazine named Playboy which concentrates
editorially on girls, books, girls, art, girls, music, fashion, girls and girls,
published an article about old-time science-fiction. (M. St.)
6. Apart from splits
based on politics,
9. But every Englishman is born with a certain miraculous power that makes
him master of the world. As the great champion of freedom and national
independence he conquers and annexes half the world and calls it
Colonization. (B. Sh.)
4. Harrison-a fine, muscular, sun-bronzed, gentle-eyed, patrician-nosed, steakfed, Gilman-Schooled, soft-spoken, well-tailored aristocrat was an out-and-out
leaflet-writing revolutionary at the time. (Jn. B.)
5. Her painful shoes slipped off. (U.)
6. She was a faded white rabbit of a woman. (A. C.)
7. And she still has that look, that don't-you-touch-me look, that women
who were beautilul carry with them to the grave. (J. B.)
8. Ten-thirty is a dark hour in a town where respectable
doors are locked at nine. (T. C.)
9."Thief!" "Pilon shouted. "Dirty pig of an untrue friend!" (J. St.)
10. He acknowledged an early-afternoon customer with a be-with-you-in-aminute nod. (D. U.)
11. His shrivelled head bobbed like a dried pod on his frail stick of a body.
(J. G.)
12. The children were very brown and filthily dirty. (V. W.)
13. Liza Hamilton was a very different kettle of Irish. Her head was small
and round and it held small and round convictions. (J. St.)
Exercise VII. In the following sentences pay attention to the structure
and semantics of oxymorons. Also indicate which of their members
conveys the individually viewed feature of the object and which one
reflects its generally accepted characteristic:
1. He caught a ride home to the crowded loneliness of the barracks. (J.)
2. Sprinting towards
the
were
some
bookcases
of superbly
was a
menace
and .a
tonic, my
REFERENCE LIST:
Galperin I. R. Stylistics. - Part IV (B). p.p. 139-146,148-164.
. . 11-12 . 82-92; 94-95.
Kukharenko V. A. A Book of Practice in Stylistics. - p.p. 22-24; 37-38; 40-41; 4244; 46-47; 53-55; 60-61.
normally not correlated with this part of speech: Mr. Hamilton, you havent any
children, have you? Well, no. And Im sorry about that I guess. I am sorriest
about that.
3. Newspapers are the organs of individual men who have jockeyed themselves to
be party leaders, in countries where a new party is born every hour over a glass
of beer in the nearest cafe. (J. R.)
4. I was violently sympathetic, as usual. (Jn. B.)
5. Four loudspeakers attached to the flagpole emitted a shattering roar of what
Benjamin could hardly call music, as if it were played by a collection of brass
bands, a few hundred fire engines, a thousand blacksmiths' hammers and the
amplified reproduction of a force-twelve wind. (A.S.)
6. The car which picked me up on that particular guilty evening was a Cadillac
limousine about seventy-three blocks long. (J. B.)
7. Her family is one aunt about a thousand years old. (Sc. F.)
8. He didn't appear like the same man; then he was all milk and honey-now he was
all starch and vinegar. (D.)
9. She was a giant of a woman. Her bulging figure was encased in a green crepe
dress and her feet overflowed in red shoes. She carried a mammoth red pocketbook
that bulged throughout as if it were stuffed with rocks. (Fl. O'C.)
10. She was very much upset by the catastrophe that had befallen the Bishops, but
it was exciting, and she was tickled to death to have someone fresh to whom she
could tell all about it (S. M.)
11. Babbitt's preparations for leaving the office to its feeble self during
the hour and a half of his lunch-period were somewhat less elaborate than the
plans for a general European War. (S. M.)
12. The little woman, for she was of pocket size, crossed her hands solemnly on
her middle. (G.)
13. We danced on the handkerchief-big space between the speak-easy tables.
(R.W.)
14. She wore a pink hat, the size of a button. (J. R.)
15. She was a sparrow of a woman. (Ph. L.)
16. And if either of us should lean toward the other, even a fraction of an
inch, the balance would be upset. (O.W.)
24
enormous
grand
piano
grinned
savagely
at
the curtains as if it
10. The owner, now at the wheel, was the essence of decent self-satisfaction;
a baldish, largish, level-eyed man, rugged of neck but sleek and round of
face-face like the back of a spoon bowl. (S. L.)
11. His fingertips seemed to caress the wheel as he nursed it over the dark
winding roads at a mere whispering sixty. (L. Ch.)
12. We plunged in and out of sun and shadow-pools, and joy, a glad-to-be-alive
exhilaration, jolted through me like a jigger of nitrogen. (. .)
13. These jingling
toys
in
his
pocket were
crying,
cheering,
chaffing,
singing,
inking,
and
sanding,
9. "Sit down, you dancing, prancing, shambling, scrambling fool parrot! Sit
down!" (D.)
Exercise IV. Analyze the morphemic structure and the
creating the occasional words in the following examples:
purpose
of
1. The girls could not take off their panama hats because this was not far from the
school gates and hatlessness was an offence. (M. Sp.)
2. David, in his new grown-upness, had already a sort of authority. (I. M.)
3. That fact had all the unbelievableness of the sudden wound. (R. W.)
4. Lucy wasn't Willie's luck. Or his unluck either. (R. W.)
5. She was waiting for something to happen or for everything to un-happen. (. .)
6. "You asked him."
"I'm un-asking him," the Boss replied. (R. W.)
7. She was a young and unbeautiful woman. (I. Sh.)
8. "Mr. Hamilton, you haven't any children, have you?"
"Well, no. And I'm sorry about that, I guess. I am sorriest about that." (J. St.)
9. "To think that I should have lived to be good-morninged, by Belladonna Took's
son!" (A. T.)
REFERENCE LIST:
Galperin I. R. Stylistics. - Part IV. p.p. 166-177,187-189.
Kukharenko V. A. A Book of Practice in Stylistics. - p.p. 18-19; 57-58.
Essential Terms:
INVERSION - the reversal of the normal order of words in a sentence, for the
sake of emphasis (in prose) or for the sake of the metre (in poetry): Dark they were
and golden-eyed. (Bradbury)
The stylistic inversion has the following patterns:
1) the object is placed at the beginning of the sentence (before the subject);
2) the attribute is placed after the word it modifies;
3) the predicative is placed before the subject;
4) the predicative is placed before the link-verb and both are placed before the
subject;
5) the adverbial modifier is placed at the beginning of the sentence.
6) both the adverbial modifier and the predicate are placed before the subject.
DETACHED CONSTRUCTION (DETACHMENT)- One of the secondary parts
of the sentence is detached from the word it refers to and is made to seem
independent of this word. Such parts are called detached and marked off by
brackets, dashes or commas or even by full stops or exclamation marks: "I have to
beg you for money! Daily!"
I was a stranger, and ye took me in: Naked, and ye clothed me: I was sick,
and ye visited me: I was in prison and ye came into me (St. Matthew).
CHIASMUS (REVERSED PARALLEL CONSTRUCTIONS) - a figure of
speech based on the repetition of a syntactical pattern with a reverse word-order
(see: SYNTACTIC PARALLELISM):
1) Let the long contention cease:
Geese are swans, and swans are geese.
(M. Arnold)
2) Beauty is truth, truth beautyt - that is all
Ye know on earth, and all ye need to know.
(Keats)
3) But many that are first shall be last; and the last shall be first
(St. Matthew).
inversion;
2)
detachment;
3)
parallel constructions;
4)
Exercise III. Find and analyse cases of detachment, suspense and inversion.
Comment on the structure and functions of each:
1. She narrowed her eyes a trifle at me and said I looked exactly
like
Celia
and the dead world, this one poor soul alone comes natural to me. (D.)
4. On, on he wandered, night and day, beneath the blazing sun, and the cold pale
moon; through the dry heat of noon, and the damp cold of night; in the grey light
of morn and the red glare of eve. (D.)
5. Benny Collan, respected guy, Benny Collan wants to marry her. An agent
could ask for more? (T. C.)
6. Women are not made for attack. Wait they must. (J. C.)
7. Out came the chase - in went the horses - on sprang - the boys - in got the
travellers. (D.)
8. Then he
said:
so? She
REPETITION
emphasizes
both
the
logical
and
the
emotional meanings of the reiterated word (phrase). In this type of repetition the
repeated element has no definite place in the sentence or utterance.
PROLEPSIS (SYNTACTIC TAUTOLOGY) a figure of syntactic anticipation,
the use of words not applicable till a later time. In prolepsis the noun subject is
repeated in the form of a corresponding personal pronoun. Miss Tilly Webster, she
slept forty days and nights without waking up. (O. H.)
SUSPENSE (RETARDATION) is a deliberate delay in the completion of the
expressed thought. What has been delayed is the main task of the utterance, and the
reader awaits the completion of the utterance with an everincreasing tension. A
suspence is achieved by a repeated occurrence of phrases or clauses expressing
condition, supposition, time and the like, all of which hold back the conclusion of
the utterance: Mankind, says a Chinese manuscript, which my friend was obliging
enough to read and explain to me, for the firsteventy thousand ages ate their meat
raw. (Ch. L)
CLIMAX (GRADATION) is a figure based upon such an arrangement of parts of
an utterance which secures a gradual increase in semantic significance or
32
emotional tension: I dont attach any value to money, I dont care about it, I dont
know about it, I dont want it, I dont keep it, it goes away from me directly.
The increase in significance may be: logical, emotional or quantitative.
Logical the relative importance of the components is looked from the point
of view of the concepts embodied in them. Every successive word or wordcombination in logical climax is semantically more important than the previous
one.
Emotive climax is based on the relative emotive meaning. It is mainly found
in one sentence as emotive charge cannot hold long. It is usually based on
repetition of the semantic centre, usually expressed by an adjective or adverb and
the introduction of an intensifier between the repeated items.
Quantitative is an evident increase in the volume of the corresponding
concepts: numerical increase, concepts of measure and time.
ANTICLIMAX is the reverse of climax. It is the descent from the sublime to the
ridiculous. In this figure of speech emotive or logical importance accumulates only
to be unexpectedly broken and brought down. The sudden reversal usually brings
forth a humorous or ironic effect. Many paradoxes are based on anticlimax:
America is the Paradise for women. That is why, like Eve, they are so extremely
anxious to get out of it!
(O.Wilde)
2) God made the country, and man made the town (Cowper).
NONSENSE OF NON-SEQUENCE rests on the extension of syntactical valency
and results in joining two semantically disconnected clauses into one sentence, as
in: "Emperor Nero played the fiddle, so they burnt Rome." (E.) Two disconnected
statements are forcibly linked together by cause / effect relations.
him
the
boot,
give
him
the
boot - I
Then
there
was
something
between
them.
There
was..
11. I notice that father's is a large hand, but never a heavy one when it
touches me, and that father is a rough voice but never an angry one
when it speaks to me. (D.)
Exercise II. Discuss the semantic centres and structural peculiarities of
antithesis:
1. Mrs. Nork had a large home and a small husband. (S. L.)
2. I like big parties. They're so intimate. At small parties there isn't any
privacy. (Sc. F.)
3. There is Mr. Guppy, who was at first
confront the fish-the beast, the monster, the nightmare-made Brody's heart
pound. (P. B.)
3. We were all in all to one another, it was the morning of life, it was bliss, it
was frenzy, it was everything else of that sort in the highest degree. (D.)
4. "I shall be sorry, I shall be truly sorry to leave you, my friend." (D.)
5. After so many kisses and promises-the lie given to her dreams, her words, the lie
given to kisses, hours, days, weeks, months of unspeakable bliss. (Dr.)
6. In marriage the upkeep of woman is often the downfall of man. (Ev.)
7. Women have a wonderful instinct about things. They can discover everything
except the obvious. (O. W.)
36
REFERENCE LIST:
Galperin I. R. Stylistics. - Part V (A), p.p. 191-193,202-225.
. . . IV, . 160-169; 182-187.
Kukharenko V. A. A Book of Practice in Stylistics. - p.p. 72-73; 84-85; 86-87.
semantic and grammatical ties remain very strong. The second part
appears as an afterthought and is often connected with the beginning of
the utterance with the help of a conjunction which brings the latter into
the foregrounded opening position: "It wasn't his fault. It was yours. And
mine. I now humbly beg you to give me the money with which to buy
meals for you to eat. And hereafter do remember it: the next time I shan't
beg. I shall simply starve." (S. L.); "Prison is where she belongs. And my
husband agrees one thousand per cent." (T. C.)
APOKOINU CONSTRUCTIONS Here the omission of the pronominal
(adverbial) connective creates a blend of the main and the subordinate clauses so
that the predicative or the object of the first one is simultaneously used as the
subject of the second one: He was the man killed that deer. (R.W.)
ELLIPSIS is absence of one or both principal parts (the subject, the predicate in
the sentence). The missing parts are either present in the syntactic environment of
the sentence (verbal context), or they are implied by the situation. In any case these
parts are easily restored from the context:
- Where is the man Im going to speak to?
- Out in the garden.
APOSIOPESIS (BREAK-IN-THE-NARRATIVE) This term which in Greek
means silence denotes intentional abstention from continuing the utterance to the
end. The speaker (writer) either begins a new utterance or stops altogether: These
people talked to me like this because they dont know who I am. If only they knew
(M. T.)
QUESTION-IN-THE-NARRATIVE (RATIOCINATIVE QUESTION) a figure
in the form of a question which a speaker often asks and often answers himself:
For what is left the poet there?
38
3) question-in-the-narrative
4) rhetorical question
5) represented speech
1.3. Stylistic use of the structural meaning:
1) litotes
II. In your books of either home reading or individual reading find
the above mentioned expressive means and stylistic devices and
comment upon their structure and stylistic function.
III. Do the following exercises:
Exercise I. Discuss different types of stylistic devices dealing with the
completeness of the sentence:
1.
In manner, close and dry. In voice, husky and low. In face, watchful
behind a blind. (D.).
2.
Mostly narrow streets. Mostly dirty streets. Mostly dark streets. (P. A.)
3.
His forehead was narrow, his face wide, his head large, and his nose all
A solemn silence: Mr. Pickwick humorous, the old lady , the fat
She merely looked at him weakly. The wonder of him! The beauty of
Ever since
the
the
panic of 2130, the starvation, chaos, riot, want. Then bucking through the
planets, the womanless, loveless years, the alone years. (R. Br.)
7.
Texas. (. .)
8.
black
February
day.
Clouds
hewn
of ponderous timber
9.
And we got down at the bridge. White cloudy sky, with mother-of-
pearl veins. Pearl rays shooting through, green and blue-white. River
roughed by a breeze. White as a new file in the distance. Fish-white
streak on the smooth pin-silver upstream. Shooting new pins. (J. C.)
10.
lost the neighbours' respect, but he gained- well, you will see whether
he gained anything in the end. (A. T.)
11.
"People liked to be with her. And-" She paused again, "-and she
"He was shouting out that he'd come back, that his mother had better
have the money ready for him. Or else! That is what he said: 'Or else!' It
was a threat." (Ch.)
14.
he'll
"Listen,
know
I'll
my
talk
voice.
to
the
Will
butler
that
pass
over
me
that
in
or
phone
do
and
have
thing
stop
you
from-"
(He
"Well,
they'll
get
chance
now
to
show-"
(hastily):
I love Nevada. Why, they don't even have mealtimes here. I never
something real nice to impress the boy invited you. (J. K.)
21.There was a whisper in my family that it was love drove him out and
not love of the wife he married. (J. St.)
his
hands,
and
splashed him,
42
and
examined it from
top
to bottom.
on
one
side, jerked his friend into the vehicle, slammed the door, put up the
steps, wafered the bill on the street-door, locked it, put the key into his
pocket, jumped into the dickey, gave the word for starting. (D.)
7."Well, guess it's about time to turn in." He yawned, went out to look at
the thermometer, slammed the door, patted her head, unbuttoned his
waistcoat, yawned, wound the clock, went to look at the furnace, yawned
and clumped upstairs to bed, casually scratching his thick woolen un dershirt. (S. L.)
8. "Give me an example," I said quietly.
43
FUNCTIONAL STYLES
Each style of the literary language makes use of a group of language means the
interrelation of which is peculiar to the given style. It is the coordination of the
language means and stylistic devices that shapes the distinctive features of each style,
and not the language means or stylistic devices themselves. Each style can be
recognized by one or more leading features, which are especially conspicuous. For
instance, the use of special terminology is a lexical characteristic of the style of
scientific prose, and one by which it can easily be recognized.
A FUNCTIONAL STYLE can be defined as a system of coordinated,
interrelated and interconditioned language means intended to fulfill a specific
function of communication and aiming at a definite effect.
Form
Written
Written
Written
and oral
Newspaper
Written
fiction
Written
Domain
Affairs
Science
Function
Information
Information
Human life
Persuasion
Everyday
information
life
Aesthetic
Art
influence
Character
Logical
Logical
Logical +
emotional
Logical
emotional
Poetry
The first differentiating property of poetry is its orderly form, which is based
mainly on the rhythmic and phonetic arrangement of the utterances. The rhythmic
aspect call forth syntactical and semantic peculiarities which also fall into more or
less strict orderly arrangement. Both the syntactical and semantic aspects of the poetic
substyle may be defined as compact, for they are held in check by rhythmic patterns.
Both syntax and semantics comply with the restrictions imposed by the rhythmic
pattern, and the result is brevity of expression, epigram-like utterances, and fresh,
46
Emotive Prose
Emotive prose has the same features as have been pointed out for the belleslettres style in general; but all these features are correlated differently in emotive
prose. The imagery is not so rich as it is in poetry, the percentage of words with
contextual meaning is not so high as in poetry, the idiosyncrasy of the author is not
so clearly discernible. Apart from metre and rhyme, what most of all distinguishes
emotive prose from the poetic style is the combination of the literary variant of the
language, both in words and syntax, with the colloquial variant. It would perhaps be
more exact to define this as a combination of the spoken and written varieties of the
language.
Present-day emotive prose is to a large extent characterized by the breaking-up of
traditional syntactical designs of the preceding periods. Not only detached
constructions, but also fragmentation of syntactical models, peculiar, unexpected
ways of combining sentences are freely introduced into present-day emotive prose.
The Drama
The third subdivision of the belles-lettres style is the language of plays. Unlike
poetry, which, except for ballads, in essence excludes direct speech and therefore
dialogue, and unlike emotive prose, which is a combination of monologue and
dialogue, the language of plays is entirely dialogue. The author's speech is almost
entirely excluded except for the playwright's remarks and stage directions,
significant though they may be.
47
PUBLICISTIC STYLE
Publicistic style also falls into three varieties, each having its own distinctive
features. Unlike other styles, the publicistic style has spoken varieties, in particular,
the oratorical substyle. The development of radio and television has brought into
being a new spoken variety, namely, the radio commentary. The other two are the
essay (moral, philosophical, literary) and articles (political, social, economic) in
newspapers, journals and magazines. Book reviews in journals and magazines and
also pamphlets are generally included among essays.
The general aim of the publicistic style, which makes it stand out as a separate
style, is to exert a constant and deep influence on public opinion, to convince the
reader or the listener that the interpretation given by the writer or the speaker is the
only correct one and to cause him to accept the point of view expressed in the speech,
essays or article not merely by logical argumentation, but by emotional appeal as
well. Due to its characteristic combination of logical argumentation and emotional
appeal, the publicistic style has features common with the style of scientific prose,
on the one hand, and that of emotive prose, on the other. Its coherent and logical
syntactical structure, with the expanded system of connectives, and its careful
paragraphing, makes it similar to scientific prose. Its emotional appeal is generally
achieved by the use of words with emotive meaning, the use of imagery and other
stylistic devices as in emotive prose. But the stylistic devices used in the publicistic
style are not fresh or genuine.
Publicistic style is also characterized by brevity of expression. In some varieties
of this style it becomes a leading feature, an important linguistic means. In essays
brevity sometimes becomes epigrammatic.
features, however, oratorical style belongs to the written variety of language, though
it is modified by the oral form of the utterance and the use of gestures. Certain
typical features of the spoken variety of speech present in this style are: direct
address to the audience (ladies and gentlemen, honorable members, the use of
the2nd person pronoun you), sometimes contractions (I'll, won't, haven't, isn't) and
the use of colloquial words.
This style is evident in speeches on political and social problems of the day, in
orations and addresses on solemn occasions as public weddings, funerals and
jubilees, in sermons and debates and also in the speeches of counsel and judges in
courts of law.
The Essay
The essay is a literary composition of moderate length on philosophical,
social, aesthetic or literary subjects. Personality in the treatment of theme and
naturalness of expression are two of the most obvious characteristics of the essay.
This literary genre has definite linguistic traits which shape the essay as a variety of
the publicistic style.
The most characteristic language features of the essay are:
1. Brevity of expression, reaching in a good writer a degree of
epigrammaticalness.
2. The use of the first person singular.
3. A rather expanded use of connectives, which facilitate the process
of grasping the correlation of ideas.
4. The abundant use of emotive words.
5. The use of similes and metaphors as one of media for the
cognitive process.
Articles
Irrespective of the character of the magazine and the divergence of subject matter
49
NEWSPAPER STYLE
English newspaper style may be defined as a system of interrelated lexical,
phraseological and grammatical means which is perceived by the community
speaking the language as a separate unity that basically serves the purpose of
informing and instructing the leader.
Since the primary function of the newspaper style is to impart information the
four basic newspaper features are:
1.
2.
3.
The headline;
4.
The editorial.
giving comments. This accounts for the total absence of any individuality of
expression and the almost complete lack of emotional coloring. It is essentially
matter-of-fact, and stereotyped forms of expression prevail.
The newspaper style has its specific features and is characterized by an extensive
use of:
1. Special political and economic terms.
2. Non-term political vocabulary.
3.
Newspapers clishs.
4.
Abbreviations.
5. Neologisms.
Besides, some grammatical peculiarities may characterize the style:
1. Complex sentences with a developed system of clauses.
2. Verbal constructions.
3. Syntactical complexes.
4. Attributive noun groups.
5. Specific word order.
The Headline
The headline is the title given to a news item or a newspaper article. The main
function of the headline is to inform the reader briefly of what the news that follows
is about. Sometimes headlines contain elements of appraisal, i.e. they show the
reporter's or paper's attitude to the facts reported.
The basic language peculiarities of headlines lie in their structure. Syntactically
headlines are very short sentences or phrases of a variety of patterns:
1. Full declarative sentences.
2. Interrogative sentences.
3. Nominative sentences.
4. Elliptical sentences.
5. Sentences with articles omitted.
6. Phrases with verbals.
51
The Editorial
Editorials are intermediate phenomenon bearing the stamp of both the newspaper
style and the publicistic style.
The function of the editorial is to influence the reader by giving an interpretation
of certain facts. Editorials comments on the political and other events of the day.
Their purpose is to give the editor's opinion and interpretation of news published and
suggest to the reader that it is the correct one. Like any publicistic writing, editorials
appeal not only to the reader's mind but to his feelings as well.
SCIENTIFIC PROSE
The language of science is governed by the aim of the functional style of scientific
prose, which is to prove a hypothesis, to create new concepts, to disclose the internal
laws of existence, development, relations between phenomena, etc. The language
52
temperature and engine speed. If there is a higher proportion of petrol the mixture
is said to be rich. A higher proportion of air gives a weak mixture.
Very simply, the carburettor consists of a tube through which the air is drawn,
and a series of very small holes known as jets which break the petrol up into tiny
droplets and pass it into the airstream in the form of a mist. The mixture of petrol
mist and air is sucked along an inlet pipe (induction manifold) and then, by way of
branches in the pipe, into each cylinder. A float chamber in the carburettor provides
a small reserve of petrol for the jets and ensures an even supply.
The flow of air into the carburettor is controlled by a butterfly throttle, which
is a flap that can be opened and closed by operating the accelerator pedal in the car.
Pressing the accelerator opens the throttle. This lets in more air which in turn sucks
more petrol vapour through the main jet. The mixture passes into the cylinders
making the engine run faster.
(3) A commercial letter:
September 16, 1998
FRAMES-BY-YOU
126 Walnut Street
Philadelphia, PA 17503
ATTENTION: MS. CYBEL MEGAN
Dear Sirs:
We are pleased to have received your order of September 15 and would like to
welcome you as a new customer of Payton's Plastics.
Your order (No. 62997) for one dozen 4"x 5" sheets of 1/8" Lucite is being
processed and will be ready for shipment on September 21. It will be delivered to
your workshop by our own van, and payment will be c.o.d. (our policy for all
orders under $100).
55
We are sure you will appreciate the clear finish and tensile strength of our entire
line of plastics. Ms. Julie Methel, your sales representative, will call on you soon
with a catalog and samples.
Cordially,
PAYTON'S PLASTICS, INC. Howard Roberts Customer relations
(4) An extract from a contract for sale/purchase of goods:
The Supplier guarantees that the goods are in all respects in accordance with the
description, technical conditions and specifications of the order, that they are free
from defects in material, design and workmanship and they conform to the
Supplier's highest standards. Should the goods prove defective during the period of
12 months from the date of putting the machine, equipment or instruments into
operation but not more than 18 months from the date of shipment, the Supplier
undertakes to remedy the defects or to replace the faulty goods delivering them
c.i.f. Baltic or Black Sea port at the Buyer's option, free of charge, or to refund the
value of the goods paid by the Buyer.
(5) A newspaper article:
Ageism Factor
I blame Prince Philip, rather than the Queen, for the extraordinarily silly
decision to support Jeffrey Archer's private bill which will allow a female child of
the monarch to inherit the crown if she is born before her brothers. Although it may
seem vaguely progressive and modern, even feminist, the truth is that it will do
nothing for women's dismal role within the reproductive system which is the basis
of all disadvantages.
If the monarchy is seen as a prize which anyone would want, then it might make
some sort of sense to open it up further to women, but in those circumstances, the
proposal emphasizes another injustice. If the former arrangement was sexist, the
new one is unacceptably ageist. Why should one child be preferred to another just
because it is older?
56
In the new spirit of the age, we have to accept that the younger our leaders or
rulers, the better their image. That is why the Conservatives are now led by
exciting, 36-year old William Hague. Some of us might be regretting the choice.
Most, I think, would agree he made a mistake in allowing his spin-doctors to
persuade him to adopt the accents of Wallace, the television entertainer of Wallace
and Gromit fame, to promote his young image.
Even so, the superiority of youth is now unassailable. Before too long, when the
monarchy falls vacant, it will go to the youngest child of either sex... are we soon
to be told that the Queen will become such a law? We rather look to the monarchy
to protect us from such nonsense. In point of fact, as I said, I suspect that Prince
Philip is to blame for this latest bit of mischief. He and Jeffrey Archer are simply
sending rude messages to their sons. Lord Archer is a Life Peer, so his opinions are
not of the slightest interest on this or any other subject, but Prince Philip deserves a
small rap on the knuckles. Some things are too important to joke about.
(The Daily Telegraph, March 2, 1998)
(6) A news item:
Standard Investor Seeking to Sell Stake
Standard Chartered is expected to be back in the bid limelight today after
reports that its biggest shareholder is looking to sell his 15pc stake.
Malaysian businessman Tan Sri Khoo is said to have been attempting to find a
buyer through a third party, with Barclays Bank one of the prime targets. The stake
is believed to have figured in the short-lived and tentative negotiations over a
Barclays bid for Standard.
Banking sources said yesterday there were two approaches involving Barclays
and Standard. But Standard sources disputed suggestions that Malcolm
Williamson, chief executive, was the driving force behind one of them despite a
meeting with Martin Taylor, Barclays chief executive.
Mr. Khoo has maintained close and friendly links with Standard since helping
the bank beat off an unwelcome bid from Lloyds more than a decade ago.
57
Banking sources say that he is unlikely to make any move without consulting
Patrick Gillam, Standard chairman, or seeking his approval.
One said: He wouldn't want to do anything which would upset Standard but it
would be surprising if he hadn't been approach about selling his stake. He's been
tremendously supportive over the years.
(The Daily Telegraph, March 2, 1998)
(7) A classified advertisement:
Companies for Sale
POLLUTION CONTROL. Company located West Midlands. Having own modern
facility in pleasant rural area with easy access to motorway network. Company
formed in 1980. Current turnover approx 750K. Profitable. Trading in UK and
internationally. Designs, supplies, installs water and wastewater treatment plant
specializing in industrial treatment schemes.
(The Daily Telegraph, March 2, 1998)
(8) From Hexameters by S. T. Coleridge:
William, my teacher, my friend! dear William
and dear Dorothea!
Smooth out the folds of my letter, and place
it on desk or on table;
Place it on table or desk; and your right hands
loosely half-closing,
Gently sustain them in air, and extending
the digit didactic,
Rest it a moment on each of the forks
of the five-forked left hand,
Twice on the breadth of the thumb, and once
on the tip of each finger;
Read with a nod of the head in a humouring
recitativo;
And, as I live, you will see my hexameters
hopping before you.
This is a galloping measure; a hop, and a trot,
and a gallop!
58
as a
method
of euphonic
organization
59
of the
text;
Stylistic Morphology
1. In the extract under consideration we observe transposition of ...
2. The pronoun ... is used instead of... in order to express ... /show
that...
3. The use of... instead of...
a) is a sign of "popular"/ illiterate/low colloquial speech;
b) creates connotations of irritation/surprise/irony etc.
4. Repetition of morphemes
a) is employed for emphasis;
b) serves the purpose of...;
c) creates indirect onomatopoeia.
5. The forms... are completely "ungrammatical" and thus show the low social
status of the speaker.
6. Stylistically colored morphemes (such as...) are signals of...
7. The substitution of... by... is stylistically relevant, because...
8. The text (the personage's discourse, the dialogue, etc.) abounds in contracted
forms, which
Stylistic Lexicology
1.
stylistically is/are...
2.
a)
b)
c)
The use of ... serves for character drawing (indicates the social position,
manner of speech.
4.
5.
(solemn, grave, passionate, pompous, unofficial, familiar, etc.) tone to the text.
6.
7.
8.
...
is introduced /
underestimation of...
9.
...
carries
a
sarcastic
overtone /
mockery/creates humorous connotations.
to
describe
(to
characterize)
has
by
deliberate
connotation
of
The
metaphor / metonymy /
irony replaces
traditional
12.
13.
14.
meaning.
15.
61
Stylistic Syntax
1. ... creates a certain rhythmic effect/ serves for rhythmic organization of the
text/creates the inner rhythm of the author's discourse/of the narration.
2. ... creates an atmosphere of tension/dynamic activities/ monotony etc.
3. ... serves as an appending stylistic device, increasing the stylistic effect of...
4. ... conveys the emotional state of the character/ the fragmentary character of his
thoughts/introduces the elements of suspence.
5. The text, which is a specimen of colloquial speech, abounds in elliptical
sentences, such as ...
6. ... is used to imply emotional tension to the text.
7. Implied question/request/negation etc. are disguised as ...
8. ...serves for emphatic negation/assertion etc.
9. ...
convey emphasis
and
expressiveness
to
the
etc.
anaphora/epiphora/ etc.
16. ... adds to the emphatic overtone of the text.
is increased by
sentences,
contracted
two-
and
colloquial
type
7. At the level of
a) phonetic description...
b) lexicology ...
c) morphological analysis...
d) syntax...
8. Conclusion.
of
speech,
such
as...
"It don't take no nerve to do somepin when there ain't nothing, he voucan
da..." (J. Steinbeck)
The stylistic purpose of the writer is to portray the character by showing
peculiarities of his idiolect. Double negation ("don't take no nerve, etc.), misuse of
person-and-number forms ("it don't"), colloquial speech form ("ain't'), and the
substandard pronunciation of fhe word -'something", rendered in writing by the
graphon "somepin'", - all this shows the low educational and cultural level of the
speaker.
Stylistic Lexicology
"I'm terribly sorry I brought you along, Nickie ", said his father, his post-operative
exhilaration gone. "It was an awful mess to put you through." (E. Hemingway).
Father's tenderness and care is stressed by the writer in the diminutive form of
the boy's name. "Nickie", compared with "Nick", shows that besides the nominal
meaning the derived word has aquired emotive meaning too. Also, the contracted
form "I'm", substandard intensifier "terribly", and the word combination "an awful
mess" participate the conveying the atmosphere of colloquial informality.
The little boy, too, we observed, had a famous appetite, and consumed schinken,
and braten, and kartoffeln, and cranberry jam... with a gallantry that did honour to
his nation. (W. Thackeray)
In the analysed extract, stylistically of interest is the use of barbarisms. The
events take place in a small German town where a boy with a remarkable appetite
is made the focus of attention. By introducing several German words into his
narrative, the author gives an indirect description of the peculiarities of the German
menu and the environment in general.
"Fostered she was with milk of Irish breast, Her sire an earl; her dame of princess
blood." (A. S.) The solemn, high-flown connotations of the utterance are due to the
use of lexical archaisms, such as "to foster" ("nourish", "bring up"), "sire" ("father"),
and "dame" ("mother"). The partial inversion at the beginning of the sentence and
4
In the parlors he was unctuously received by the pastor and a committee of three,
wearing morning clothes and a manner of Christian intellectuality. (S. Lewis)
In the passage under analysis the author brings into play effective zeugma
("wearing morning clothes and a manner of Christian intellectuality") to convey
the ironic attitude of the protagonist to the situation and the members of the
religious committee. The affected insincere atmosphere of the reception is further
sustained by the high-flown epithet "unctuously", which adds to the stylistic effect.
"I'm eating my heart out"
"It's evidently a diet that agrees with you. You are growing fat on it." (W.S.
Maugham)
The semantic and stylistic effect of pun here is due to simultaneous
realization in close context of the phraseological and non-phraseological meanings
of the phrase "to eat one's heart out". The first speaker uses it figuratively, while
the second one intentionally interprets it as a free word combination, thus creating
ironic connotations.
Stylistic Syntax
Into a singularly restricted and indifferent environment Ida Zobel was born. (Th.
Dreiser)
The narration begins with partial inversion, promoting the adverbial
modifier of place into the most conspicuous position, thus adding relevance and
importance to the indication of the place of action.
It is not possible to describe coherently what happened next: but I, for one, am
not ashamed to confess that, though the fair blue sky was above me, and the green
spring woods beneath me, and the kindest friends around me, yet I became terribly
frightened, more frightened that I ever wish to become again, frightened in a way I
never have known either before or after. (E.M. Foster).
The syntax of this sentence paragraph shows several groups of parallel
constructions, combined with epiphora ("above me", "beneath me", "around
me"), polysyndeton ("and... and..."), and anaphora ("frightened... frightened...").
0
him.
" Oh! I'm always at it. Had a go at a pretty well everything in the writing
line."
"Have you had anything published?" asked Anna with proper awe. She
was glad to see that Mr. Foster looked gratified and guessed, rightly, that he
had.
"One or two little things," he admitted with a very fair show of insouciance.
"How lovely!" said Anna enthusiastically. ("Fresh from the Country ")
The passage represents an informal dialogue between a young school teacher and
her colleague. The personage's discourse is interspersed with instances of the
author's narration, which is marked by the use of bookish words (" deprecatingly",
"gratified", " awe", "insouciance", etc.) and well-organized lengthy sentences, such as
the following one, complicated by detachment: "She was glad to see that Mr. Foster
looked gratified and guessed, rightly, that he had." The dialogue, on the contrary,
abounds in short, one-member and elliptical, sentences ("Ever do any writing?"
"How lovely!"). The vocabulary, too, participates in conveying the atmosphere of
colloquial informality. Alongside with standard colloquial "had a go", it includes
interjections ("Oh!"), contracted forms ("I'm"), the colloquial intensifier "pretty",
and a word of highly generalized meaning ("little things").
A case of understatement ("One or two little things") in the end of the passage is
used to render the affected modesty of the speaker, which is becomes clear from the
subsequent author's remark.
something did not drawl: "By God, you are going to have a feed, my boy!"
To show Caister's attitude to his own distress and worry over his worn-out
clothes, the author makes use of numerous stylistic devices: mixture of styles (cf.
the use of colloquial "fancy himself and bookish "refitted" in close context); the
vulger intensifier "damned"; the anaphoric repetition of "very" and "on", combined
with parallelism: The sunlight of this damned town was very strong, very hard on
sems and button-holes, on knees and elbows! Together with the actual tweeds, in
which he could so easily fancy himself refitted...."
The list of devices employed in the second paragraph is by no means
exhaustive. Find and interpret the meaning and function of the following.
of a man long fed... of an eyeglasses well rimmed... of a velour hat salved...;
under it was his new phenomenon... ;
meche blanche;
Was it an asset or the beginning of the end?
that shadowy face;
atrophy, nerve, tissue;
perhaps, but.
When Caister ran into Bryce-Green, it was the latter's face that attracted his
attention. This idea is emphasized by the use of metonymy. ...he had passed a
face he knew. A chain of post-positive attributes with the metaphoric epithet
"cherubic" gives a vivid and colourful description of Bryce-Green's appearance:
Turning, he saw it also turn on a short and dapper figure - a face rosy, bright, round,
with an air of cherubic knowledge, as of a getter-up of amateur theatricals." This
description sets Bryce-Green at once in an opposition to Caister, as a prosperous
well-fed, well-clothed man to a poor and nearly starving one. This idea is
reinforced by the use of antithesis: And - elegantly threadbare, roundabout and
dapper - the two walked side by side. It is a complex stylistic device, in which the first
opposed part is constituted by another figure of speech, an oxymoron ("elegantly
threadbare"). The antithesis is made prominent by detachment, which is marked in
"feed" replaces "meals"); elliptical sentences (Haven't seen you... Doing anything with
yourself?). All these elements serve to render the unofficial character of
communication.
TRAINING TEST I
1. Choose the right answer to define the stylistic device in an underlined word :
I went back to the novel I had been reading, a Simenon.
a) metaphor
c) personification
b) antonomasia
d) metonymy
c) climax
b) enantiosemy
d) euphemism
3. Give the definition of a functional style and single out the main functional
styles according to Prof. Galperins classification.
4. Name the particular stylistic device, which is defined as a figure of speech
based on the use of the similar syntactic pattern in two or more sentences or
syntagms.
5. Define the particular type of euphemisms in the following phrases:
a) a woman of certain type
b) a mighty reaper
d) a sanitary engineer
e) Native Americans
6. Define the structural type of epithets in the following:
a) golden shoulders
) a devil of a woman
d) unbreakfasted morning
e) a please-don't-touch-me-or-I-shall-cry look
7. Oxymoron is:
a) a trope which is based on the use of an evaluative word in the
opposite meaning;
b) a trope based on the transfer of meaning;
c) a figure of speech based on the play upon words similar in spelling
but different in meaning;
d) a figure of speech and a trope based on the combination of words with
contradictory meaning.
8. Adduce illustrative examples of:
a) grammatic inversion
b) emphatic inversion
c) stylistic inversion
9. Enumerate the main types of detachment and adduce illustrative examples of
each type.
10. What are the main structural and semantic differences between the metaphor
and simile? Adduce examples to illustrate your viewpoint.
TRAINING TEST II
1. Choose the right answer to define the stylistic device in an underlined word :
took little satisfaction in telling each Mary something.
a) personification
c) antonomasia
b) simile
d) oxymoron
c) pun
b) zeugma
d) hyperbole
9. Enumerate the main stylistic types of syntactic connection between the parts of
the utterance and adduce illustrative examples.
10.
examples.
E. Y. Esar
E. A. E. Albey
E. F. E. Ferber
E. W. E. Waugh
FI. O'C. Fl..OConnor
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G. B. - George Byron
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J. A. J. Aldridge
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J. G. J. Gardner
J. K. J. Kerouac
J. O'H. J. O'Hara
J. R. J. Reed
St. - J. Steinbeck
In. B. - J. Barth
In Bn. - J. Bunyan
K. . . Kesey
L. St. Leacock
L. Ch. L. Charteris
M. A. Milne
M. Sp. M. Spark
M. St. Morning Star
M. T. M. Twain
N. M. N. Mailer
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Sc. F. Sc. Fitzgerald
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St. B. St. Barstow
T. C. T. Capote
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BIBLIOGRAPHY
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CONTENTS
THE METALANGUAGE OF LINGUOSTYLISTICS...
page
3
11
SEMINAR 3 - Lexical Expressive Means and Stylistic Devices. Peculiar Use of Set
Expressions. Stylistic Functioning of Morphological forms........
20
28
31
37
FUNCTIONAL STYLES
44
59
TRAINING TEST I.
67
TRAINING TEST II
68
71
BIBLIOGRAPHY....
72