Экзамен по стилистике Stylistics as a science and style as a main stylistic category


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экзамен по стилистике

Onomatopoeia and rhythm
Onomatopoeia is a combination of speech sounds which aims at imitating sounds produced in nature (wind, sea, thunder, etc.) by things (machines or tools, etc.) by people (singing, laughter) and animals. Therefore the relation between onomatopoeia and the phenomenon it is supposed to represent is one of metonymy There are two varieties of onomatopoeia: direct and indirect.
Direct onomatopoeia is contained in words that imitate natural sounds, as ding-dong, burr, bang, cuckoo. These words have different degrees of imitative quality. Some of them immediately bring to mind whatever it is that produces the sound. Others require the exercise of a certain amount of imagination to decipher it. Onomatopoetic words can be used in a transferred meaning, as for instance, ding - dong, which represents the sound of bells rung continuously, may mean 1) noisy, 2) strenuously contested.
Ex. Mr. Bingley, while shaving on the day after his fiftieth birthday saw his reflection and admitted his remarkable resemblance to a mouse: “Cheep-cheep!” he said to himself with a shrug.
Indirect onomatopoeia demands some mention of what makes the sound, as rustling of curtains in the following line: And the silken, sad, uncertain rustling of each purple curtain(E. A. Poe) where the repetition of the sound [s] actually produces the sound of the rustling of the curtain.
Indirect onomatopoeia is a combination of sounds the aim of which is to make the sound of the utterance an echo of its sense. It is sometimes called "echo writing".
Indirect onomatopoeia aims at producing the general effect of imitation by carefully choosing the words to create such impression.
Ex. A faint breeze of romance softly fanned my cheeks.
Rhythm is a constant feature of poetry based on regular usage of stressed and unstressed syllables. In prose it is easily recognizable and is based on structural arrangement of sentences. The choice of words similar in structure if not in meaning.
Ex.: There was nothing else especially remarkable about him, except what happened to him, which was certainly remarkable, not to say regrettable.
Rhythm is sometimes used by the author to produce the desired stylistic effect, whereas in poetry rhythmical arrangement is a constant organic element, a natural outcome of poetic emotion. Poetic rhythm is created by the regular recurrence of stressed and unstressed syllables or equal poetic lines. The regular alternations of stressed and unstressed syllables form a unit – the foot. Foot is the smallest segment of the line consisting of one stressed syllable and one or two unstressed syllables.



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