FIGURES OF SPEECH
Definition:
· Figure of Speech is a word or group of words that describes one thing in terms of another and is not meant to be understood as literally true.
· A figure of speech is a word or phrase that departs from everyday literal language for the sake of comparison, emphasis, clarity, or freshness.
· Also known as, rhetorical figure, metaphorical language/ literary devices
Used well, figures of speech greatly enhance your fiction, and can be a very economical way of getting an image or a point across, but used incorrectly, they will confuse the reader.The special emphasis is typically accomplished by the user's conscious deviation from the strict literal sense of a word, or from the more commonly used form of word order or sentence construction. From ancient times to the present, such figurative locutions have been extensively employed by orators and writers to strengthen and embellish their styles of speech and composition. A number of the more widely used figures of speech, some of which are also called tropes, follow.
1) Metaphor is a figure of speech that makes a direct comparison between two unlike things without using the words “like or as”. A metaphor suggests that one thing is another thing, or is equal to another thing. It uses a word or phrase denoting one kind of idea or object in place of another word or phrase for the purpose of suggesting a likeness between the two. Metaphors create vivid descriptions with few words, as the subject of the comparison takes on the qualities of the thing with which it is compared.
'He was a lion in the fight'.
In the biblical Book of Psalms, the writer speaks of God's law as
“A light to his feet and a lamp to his path.”
“The LORD is my shepherd”
2) A simile is a figure of speech that makes a comparison between two unlike things and uses the words "like," "as," "than" or "resembles". Or Simile is specific comparison by means of the words “like” or “as” between two kinds of ideas or objects. Similes make descriptions vivid by comparing their subjects with known events or things. Effective similes help readers visualize what is being described. Examples,
As cool as a cucumber',
'As white as snow',
'Life is just like an ice-cream, enjoy it before it melts',
“Christianity shone like a beacon in the black night of paganism”
3) Irony: It is the expression of ideas which are exactly opposite to the implied meaning.
Or Irony is a disagreement or incongruity between what is said and what is understood, or what is expected and what actually occurs. Irony can be used intentionally or can happen unintentionally. Authors can use irony to make their audience stop and think about what has just been said, or to emphasize a central idea. The audience's role in realizing the difference between what is said and what is normal or expected is essential to the successful use of irony.
'A student of psychology going insane',
'A bank lends you money provided you show that it's not needed'
Or the warning found on every cigarette pack, 'Smoking is injurious to health' is an irony!
There are three scenarios in which irony occurs.
a. Verbal irony is when the intended meaning of the statement or work is different (often the opposite of) what the statement or work literary says. For Example, Ibsen’s An Enemy of the People is ironically used since Dr. Stockman who is declared an enemy, is in really sense, and is a friend of the people.
b. Situational Irony occurs when what happens is contrary to what is expected; or the actual outcome of a situation is the opposite of what is expected. For example
The son of the English teacher fails the English Exam.
The daughter of a rich merchant is expelled from school for lack of school fees of 20,000/=.
c. Dramatic Irony occurs when events or facts not known to the character on stage in a fictional work, are known to another character and the audience or reader. E.g. Oedipus the King.
4) Personification: It is a representation of abstract ideas or inanimate objects as having human attributes or qualities. OrPersonification is the representation of inanimate objects or abstract ideas as living beings. Personification connects readers with the object that is personified. Personification can make descriptions of non-human entities more vivid, or can help readers understand, sympathize with, or react emotionally to non-human characters.
'Death laid its icy hands on kings',
“Necessity is the mother of invention
“the mountains cried, the valleys wept, and the hills wailed all mourning the death of Nyerere.
5) Apostrophe: It is a direct address to the dead or an inanimate object creating an emotional surge. In Apostrophe,an actor turns from the audience, or a writer from readers, to address a person who usually is either absent or deceased, an inanimate object, or an abstract idea. As in John Donne’s “Death Be Not Proud”
'Caesar, only if you were alive'
'O stone, O might, O heart of man-made God, Thou art the emblem of our hope',
6) Rhetorical question is the act of asking questions not to gain information but just for emphasis. No answer, in fact, is expected by the speaker. The device is illustrated in the following series of sentences:
“Did you help me when I needed help? Did you once offer to intercede in my behalf? Did you do anything to lessen my load?”
7) Hyperbole/overstatement is a figure of speech in which the truth is exaggerated for emphasis or for humorous effect. In exaggeration a person or thing is depicted as being better or worse, or larger or smaller, than is actually the case. It is, used often to ridicule, create humour or any drastic emotional appeal.
'The waves rose as high as the mountains,'
'I am so hungry that I can eat a whole cow'
'She wept and wept until there was a sea of tears'.
8) Litotes/ understatement: It is an understated expression when the actual idea to be expressed is quite significant. It is like downplaying an idea when it seems to be the best possible course of action or description. Statements such as,
'I was not feeling unhappy”. Meaning I was feeling happy
“The English poet Thomas Gray showed no inconsiderable powers as a prose writer, “meaning that Gray was in fact a very good prose writer
I am not unmindful- meaning I mind
9) Euphemism, this is the substitution of an offensive/unpleasant term or phrase by the one that has pleasant associations, as in the use of “lavatory” or “rest room” for “toilet,” and “pass away” for “die.”
10) Metonymy is a figure of speech that associates the name of one thing with that of something else. This is a word that substitutes for an object, the name of an attribute or concept associated to that object. The use of ‘crown’ for ‘king’ or for the government ruled by a king is an example of a metonym.
a. “We waited hopelessly for two sunsets”
“Sunsets” here implies two days,
b. “He has a good name in our society.” Or,
“They spoilt his name.” “Name” refers to reputation
c. “A press conference by the “Statehouse”. Here,statehouse refers to the officials of the Statehouse who will be holding the press conference.
A metonym is not necessarily one word. As in a hotel -“Room 44 needs a bottle of champagne” “Room 44” here refers to the customer who is in that room.
d. “The hostess kept a good table,” when “good food” is implied.
11) Synecdoche: is a figure of speech in which the whole is represented by a part or a part by the whole is called as synecdoche. Example
'He has several mouths to feed'. Here mouths represent people.
“50 head of cattle; “head” is used to mean whole animals,
“The president's administration contained the best “brains” in the country; “brains” is used for intellectually brilliant persons.
12) Onomatopoeia, imitation of natural sounds by words. Examples in English are the italicized words in the phrases
“The humming bee,”
“The cackling hen,”
“The whizzing arrow,”
“The buzzing saw.”
The Hissing snake,
The Splashing water,
The Bang of a door.
13) Oxymoron: This is a figure of speech which includes words or ideas opposite in meaning placed one after the other. Oxymoron combines two seemingly contradictory or incongruous words.
· 'True lies',
· 'Open secret',
· 'Pretty ugly face',
· 'Feeling alone in a crowd’,
· Living deaths,
· Dear wounds,
· Fair storms,
· Silent noise
· Freezing fires
· Pain for pleasure
· Clearly confused
· Cruel kindness
· Deafening silence
· Only choice
· Random order
· Alone together
· Awfully good
· Dark light
· Light darkness
· Appear invisible
· Goodbye reception.
· Growing smaller
· True myt
Unpopular celebrity
· Worthless gold
· Sad joy
· Sweet agony
· Daydream in the night
14) Paradox, this is a figure of speech which includes a statement or sentiment that appears contradictory to common sense yet is true in fact. Simply put it is a statement that seems to contradict itself but is, nevertheless, true. These statements or assertions, according to logic, cannot be true, yet the figure links them in a way that creates a new meaning, one that defies logic but works on situation. Example of paradox is found in Martin Luther’s speech “I Have a Dream”
“..The Negro is still languished in the corners of American society and finds himself an exile in his own land”
In the above sentence, logically speaking, one cannot be in exile while he is still in his own land, as the true meaning of the word exile is. But the situation described, is the one that makes us see as if the Negros are in exile, since they have nothing to enjoy in their own land.
15) Climax, It is the arrangement of ideas in an increasing order of their importance. It emphasizes the meaning in a clear and effective way. Or it is the arrangement of words, clauses, or sentences in the order of their importance, the least forcible coming first and the others rising in power until the last, as in the following sentences:
“It is an outrage to bind a Roman citizen; it is a crime to scourge him; it is almost parricide to kill him; but to crucify him—what shall I say of this?”
'He came, he saw, he conquered, 'her village, her state, her nation were her pride',
'Eat, drink and sleep' and so on.
16) Anticlimax is a sequence of ideas that abruptly diminish in dignity or importance at the end of a sentence or passage, generally for satirical effect. The following sentence contains an illustration of anticlimax:
“Among the great achievements of Benito Mussolini's regime were the revival of a strong national consciousness, the expansion of the Italian Empire, and the running of the trains on time.”
17) Antithesis is a juxtaposition of two words, phrases, clauses, or sentences contrasted or opposed in meaning in such a way as to give emphasis to contrasting ideas. An example of antithesis is the following line by the English poet Alexander Pope: “To err is human, to forgive divine.” “The LORD gave and the LORD has taken away.
18) Conceit, it is an elaborate, extended and sometimes surprising comparison between things that, at first sight, do not have much in common. It is also defined as an elaborate, often extravagant metaphor or simile making an analogy between totally dissimilar things. The term originally meant “concept” or “idea.” The use of conceits is especially characteristic of 17th-century English metaphysical poetry. An example occurs in the poem “A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning,” by the English poet John Donne, in which two lovers' souls are compared to the legs of drawing compasses.
19) Allusion is a literary device in which the writer or speaker refers either directly or indirectly to a famous person, event, place or thing in history, religion, mythology, politics, sports, science or to a work of art or literature. Allusion connects the content of a text with the larger world. Allusion calls to mind the ideas and emotions associated with a well-known event or published work. Those ideas and emotions then contribute to what the author conveys. As in Martin Luther’s speech
"Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent, a new nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal."
20) Parallel structure /parallelism / Parallel constructionis a repetition of the same pattern of words or phrases within a sentence or passage to show that two or more ideas have the same level of importance. Parallel structure helps to organize ideas, making a text or speech easier to understand. Parallel structure can also create a satisfying rhythm in the language an author uses. In this literary device, the idea to be stated is repeated in some other form to emphasize the articulation.
'She cried, she wept but he was unmoved',
'Show me your strength, your stamina, your energy only where it is needed'
21) Anaphora Also called epanaphora, the repetition of a word or expression at the beginning of successive phrases for rhetorical or poetic effect, as in Lincoln's
"We cannot dedicate-
We cannot consecrate-
We cannot hallow this ground"
I am a true Acoli
I am not a half-caste
I am not a slave girl
22) Imagery This is a figure of speech which creates mental pictures that appeal to readers, five senses. Writers use sensory details to make readers imagine how things look, feel, smell, sound and taste. There are different types of images depending on the five senses.
Visual image- this is an image of sight e.g.
Greater than the Rift-Valley;
Camera film to light, coils of the greatest python
Stronger than the blows of the sea
When the hurricane is at its height.
Organic image -this is an image of feeling
Dying in agony
More painful than the yell
Audio image – this is an image of sound
The yell of a woman
I plead the cry of the nation
The screams of a man
Kinetic image -this is an image of motion.
Is faster than camera film
But as slow as tropism
I declare running Better than walking
Tactile image - this is an image of touch
As it falls on the seemingly soft soil
ΓΌ Standing hard and ready..
Olfactory image – this is an image of smell. a stinking room
Gustatory image. This is an Image of taste
In search of sweetness
Thermal image this is an image of heat.
23) Anadiplosis; the repetition in which the last expression of one statement becomes the first expression in the following statement. As in the poem “Africa” by David Diop
The blood of your sweat
The sweat of your work
The work of your slavery
The slavery of your children
24) Symbolism is a literary device that uses one object to stand for something else or to mean something else. Actions can also be symbolic, such as washing hands to indicate non-involvement. Some symbols are universal, with generally accepted meanings, such as a crown to mean superiority or the colour red to mean danger. Symbols, especially specific ones, often mean more than one thing.
Sunrise symbolizes the beginning of the struggle and sunrise symbolizes the end of the struggle in the poem “Sunrise”
25) Pun - It is a humorous play on two or more meanings of the same word or on two different words with the same sound. It is also understood as a play on the multiple meanings of the word or on two words that sound alike but have different meanings. It uses words that have similar or identical sounds but very different meanings. Quite often it is used to pass a witty remark or bring about a sarcastic effect. Examples are,
"It is better to have loved a short person and lost, than never to have loved A TALL."
'I KNEAD the dough so that I can eat',
Another good pun is found in the last but one line of Shakespeare’s “When My Love Swears That She Is Made of Truth.” He says;
‘Therefore, I LIE with her and she with me’ Shakespeare Sonnet 138
26) Allegory is a form of extended metaphor, in which objects, persons, and actions in a narrative, are equated with the meanings that lie outside the narrative itself. The underlying meaning has moral, social, religious, or political significance, and characters are often personifications of abstract ideas as charity, greed, or envy.
Thus an allegory is a story with two levels of meanings, a literal meaning and a symbolic meaning. A more modern example of allegory is George Orwell’sAnimal Farm, which on the surface level is about a group of animals who take over their farm but on the deeper level is an allegory of the Russian Revolution and the shortcomings of the Communism.
27) Anastrophe: Also known as inversion, it is a sentence or a poetic expression which reverses or changes the order of words for greater emphasis. The following are examples of anastrophe.
'Ten thousand saw I at a glance' instead of “I saw ten thousand at a glance”
‘Forward they go” which is not a normal English structure of SVA. ‘They go forward’
‘And away they go’ instead of ‘and they go away’
‘While your hive they plunder’ instead of ‘while they plunder your hive’.
28) Satire
Is a literary technique which principally ridicules its subject which includes individuals, organization or states often as an intended means of provoking or preventing changes. Satire is any piece of writing that uses devices such as irony. It is a text or performance that uses irony, derision or wit to expose or attack human vice, foolishness or stupidity.