1、英语修辞手法英语修辞手法Figures of speech are forms of expression that depart from normal word or sentence order or from the common literal meanings of words, for the purpose of achieving a special effect. In everyday speech and writing and in literature the chief functions of figures of speech are probably to
2、embellish, to emphasize or to clarify. They are used to give tone or atmosphere to discourse, to provide vivid examples, to stimulate thought by startling the reader or listener, to give life to inanimate objects, to amuse, or to ornament. Figures of speech exist in almost endless variety and many a
3、re closely related or intricately overlap, hence no completely satisfactory system of classification has ever been devised. The following may be considered one of the serviceable classifications of the present day: 1. Figures of resemblance or relationship. These are the most important, interesting,
4、 and frequent figures of speech. 2. Figures of emphasis or understatement. The chief function of these is to draw attention to an idea. 3. Figures of sound. 4. Verbal games and gymnastics. Some of these are rare and minor figures. 1. Figures of resemblance or relationship 1) Simile: a figure that in
5、volves an expressed comparison, almost always introduced by the word like or as. The two things compared must be dissimilar and the basis of resemblance is usually an abstract quality. a) As cold waters to a thirsty soul, so is good news from a far county. (Proverb) b) The water lay gray and wrinkle
6、d like an elephants skin. (Nancy Hale) c) My very thoughts were like the ghostly rustle of dead leaves. (Joseph Conrad) 2) Metaphor: The substitution of one thing for another, or the identification of two things from different ranges of thought. It is often loosely defined as an implied comparison,
7、a simile without ?like or ?as. Metaphor is considered by many the most important and basic poetic figure and also the commonest and the most beautiful. a) Boys and girls, tumbling in the streets and playing, were moving jewels. b) The town was stormed after a long siege. c) Snow clothes the ground.
8、d) He swam bravely against the tide of popular applause. A note of warning: Avoid mixing figures of speech. a) This is not the time to throw up the sponge, when the enemy, already weakened and divided, are on the run to a new defensive position. (mixed metaphor; a mixture of prize ring and battlefie
9、ld) b) There is every indication that Nigeria will be a tower of strength and will forge ahead. (mixed metaphor; a mixture of a fortress and a ship) 3) Personification: a figure that endows objects, animals, ideas, or abstractions with human form, character, or sensibility. There are three chief kin
10、ds of personifications: a) That produced by the use of adjectives. the blushing rose; the thirsty ground b) That produced by the use of verbs. the kettle sings; the waves danced c) That produced by the use of nouns. the smiles of spring; the whisper of leaves 4) Metonymy: the substitution of the nam
11、e of one thing for that of another with which it is closely associated. a) The pen is mightier than the sword. (Here you have the instrument (pen or sword) as a name for the people wielding it.) b) Gray hairs should be respected. (the symbol (gray hair) as a name for the persons (old people) symboli
12、zed) c) He is too fond of the bottle. (= He is too fond of drinking; the container (wine bottle) as a name for the thing (wine) contained) d) I have never read Li Bai. (the poet (Li Bai) as a name for the thing made (poems written by Li Bai) 5) Synecdoche: commonly, the naming of a part to mean the
13、whole, as in hands for men who do manual labour, a fleet of 50 sails for a fleet of 50 ships. But various other such substitutions are also included in the term. a) Have you any coppers? (= Have you any money?) (coppers stand for coins of low value made of copper or bronze; here it is the naming of
14、the material (copper) for the thing made (coin) ) b) He is a poor creature. (the naming of the genus for the species) c) He is the Newton of this century. (the naming of an individual for a class) Note: Synecdoche can easily be mistaken for metonymy. 6) Antonomasia: the term for some common figurati
15、ve uses of names a) the use of an epithet or title in place of a name his majesty for a king or the name of the king his honor for a judge or the name of the judge the Boss for the name of the employer b) the use of a proper name instead of a common noun a Judas (Judas was one of the twelve disciple
16、s of Jesus Christ who betrayed Jesus) for a traitor a Quisling (Norwegian fascist politician who led a puppet regime during the German occupation of Norway, later executed for treason) for a traitor He is our Gorky. Gorky, (famous Russian writer) for a famous writer Note: cf. synecdoche. There is a
17、certain degree of overlapping here. 7) Euphemism: the substitution of an inoffensive expression for one that may be disagreeable, as in the use of pass away or pass on for die, misinform for lie in the gentleman is misinformed, remains for a corpse, visiting the necessary for going to the toilet, et
18、c. 2. Figures of emphasis or understatement 1) Hyperbole: a conscious exaggeration for the sake of emphasis, not intended to be understood literally. a) The wave ran mountain high. b) America laughed with Mark Twain. c) His speech brought the house down. d) All the perfumes of Arabia will not sweete
19、n this little hand. 2) Litotes: a form of understatement which gains its particular effect by phrasing in the negative what it wishes to say positively. a) This is no small accomplishment. (It means this is an accomplishment of considerable magnitude.) b) The German fleet was not an unworthy opponen
20、t. (It means the German fleet was a formidable opponent.) c) This is not at all unpleasant. (It means it is quite pleasant.) 3) Antithesis: the setting of contrasting phrases opposite each other for emphasis. In true antithesis the opposition between the elements is manifested through parallel gramm
21、atical structure. a) The quest for righteousness is Oriental, the quest for knowledge, Occidental. (Sir William Osler) b) Good breeding consists in concealing how much we think of ourselves and how little we think of the other person. (Mark Twain) c) A friend exaggerates a mans virtues, an enemy his
22、 crimes. d) The convention bought time; it could not bring settlement. e) its failures became a part of history but its successes held the clue to a better international order. 4) Paradox: a statement that appears to be logically contradictory and yet may be true, the purpose of which is to provoke
23、fresh thought. a) One mans terrorist is another mans freedom fighter. b) A lover of peace emerged as a magnificent leader of war. c) My life closed twice before its close. (Emily Dickinson) (meaning two truly eventful things occurred in her life before that life ceased) 5) Oxymoron: a kind of parado
24、x or antithesis that links together two sharply contrasting terms, as cheerful pessimist, the wisest fool in Christendom, living deaths, freezing fires, glorious defeat, etc. 6) Epigram: a short, pithy statement in verse or prose, usually with a touch of wit, often antithetical a) Conscience is the
25、inner voice that warns us that someone may be looking. (H. L. Mencken) b) Necessity is the mother of invention. c) The child is father of the man. (Wordsworth) (the intended meaning is that the actions of a boy indicate what kind of a man he is likely to become) d) Experience is the name everyone gi
26、ves to his mistakes. Note: There may be some overlapping of an epigram and a paradox. 7) Apostrophe: the turning away from the subject and the addressing of an absent person or a personified object or abstraction. The shift is both emotional and dignified, therefore most appropriate in serious and s
27、tately contexts. a) You Heavens, give me that patience, patience I need! (Shakespeare, King Lear) b) Envy, be silent and attend! (Pope) c) Milton, thou shouldst be living at this hour: England hath need of thee. (Wordsworth) (Milton, famous English revolutionary and poet, who wrote Paradise Lost. Jo
28、hn Milton lived and wrote in the 17th century and the English romantic poet, William Wordsworth in the 18th and 19th centuries. ) 8) Rhetorical Question: a question neither requiring nor intended to produce a reply but asked for emphasis. The assumption is that only one answer is possible. a) Was I
29、not at the scene of the crime? (Lesson 2) b) O Wind If Winter comes, can Spring be far behind? (Shelley: Ode to the West Wind. ) 9) Irony: the expression of actual intent in words that carry the opposite meaning. It is an effective literary device because it gives the impression of great restraint.
30、a) . until we are marching backwards to the glorious age of the sixteenth century (Lesson 10) b) He was my friend, faithful and just to me: But Brutus says he was ambitious; And Brutus is an honourable man. (Shakespeare: Julius Caesar) (Antony here is saying just the opposite. He means that Brutus i
31、s not honourabte, he is a murderer. ) 10) Sarcasm: a cutting remark, a verbal sneer. Sarcasm pretends to disguise its meaning, but does not intend to be misunderstood. a) Oh, youre really a great friend, arent you? (addressed to one who wont lend the speaker 5 Yuan ) b) He is very generous indeed. (
32、referring to one who wont lend the speaker his dictionary) c) Wheres y go for it, man Jamaica? (Lesson 16) (Hopkinss cutting remark to McNair, the custodian, for not being quick enough with the rum. Jamaica is an island in the Caribbean, world famous for its rum.) 11) Satire: It generally refers to a piece of literary work prose, poetry or drama and generally not to a single sentence. It uses ridicule to expo
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