Stilistika pdf


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Bog'liq
stilistika

Thus the word «crown» may stand for a «king»or «queen»; «cup» or «glass» for the dri
e.g. the press - the personnel connected with publishing establishment; a hand - a worker; the cradle - infancy .
These are trite metonymies:
Genuine metonymy is a SD. It reveals a quite unexpected substitution of one word for another, of one concept for another.
e.g.Then they came in. Two of them a man with long fair moustache and a silent dark man...
Definitely, the moustache and I had nothing in common, /D. Lessing/
In this example man's facial appearance- «the moustache stands for the man himself.
Many attempts have been made to pinpoint the types of relations which genuine metonymy is based on. Among them the following are most common:

  1. A concrete thing is used instead of an abstract notion. In this case the thing becomes a symbol of the notion:

    1. He supported his family by the pen.

    2. The pen is stronger than the sword.

    3. What the head had left undone doing silently.

    4. Wherefore feed, and clothe and save,

From the cradle to the grave
/W.Shakespeare/

    1. Those ungreatful drones who

/from early childhood to death /.

would Drain your sweat - nay, drink your blood./ Shelley
/

  1. The container instead of the thing contained:

    1. the hall applauded

    2. the kettle boils

    3. Tell him our home cries out for him

  2. The relation of proximity as in:

The round game table was boisterous and happy.

  1. The next type of relation reveals the relation between the whole and a part. This type of metonymy is called synecdoche. In this case a part is used for the whole, or the individual for a definite one, or singular for plural.

e.g.Return to her?
No rather abjure all roofs and choose... To be a comrade with the wolf and owl...

Here the word «roofs» stands for «houses» or a place to live in, or a «shelter». «Wolf «for
«wolves» or even for «wild beasts», owl for «owls» or rather for «birds» in the woods.
Other examples:
She has no roof over her head You 've got a nice fox on you

  1. The sign for the thing signified:

    1. The messenger was not long in returning followed by a pair of heavy boots that came bumping along the passage. / Dickens /

    2. The one in brown suit gaped at her. Blue suit grinned, might even have winked But big nose in the grey suit still stared - and he had small angry eyes and did not even smile.

  2. A relation between a thing and the material out of which it is made. e.g. The steel shines to defend

Never in her life had she worn any gold.
Here «gold» stands for rings, bracelets, and other adornments made of gold.

  1. The instrument which the doer uses in performing the action instead of the action or the doer himself.

  1. As the sword is the worst argument that can be used, so should it be the last. /Byron/

  2. Give every man thine ear and few thy voice./Shakespeare /

  3. His pen knows no compromise.

  1. Author for his work

e.g.I read Shakespeare. He reads Byron.
Metonymy is expressed by nouns or substantives nSuhme erals e.g.
was a pale and fresh eighteen, The man looked a rather old forty-five.
The function of the metonymy here is to indicate that the speaker knows nothing of the man
in question, moreover there is a definite implication that this is the first time the speaker has seen him.
STUDY QUESTIONS:

  1. What types of lexical meaning do you know?

  2. Meaning from the stylistic point of view.

  3. The linguistics nature of stylistics device.

  4. Principles of classification of stylistics devices.

  5. What is metaphor?

  6. Semantic structure of metaphor.

  7. What types of metaphor do you know?

  8. What is metonymy?

  9. What is the difference between metaphor and metonymy?

  10. Classification of metonymies from the semantic point of view.

Recommended literature:



  1. Galperin I.R. English Stylistics. M., 2000

  2. Kukharenko V.A. A book of practice in stylistics. M., 1986.

  3. Essays in Modern Stylistics. Ed. by D.C. Freeman. L - N.Y. 1981.

  4. Арнольд И.В. Стилистика. Современный английский язык: Учебник для вузов. - 5-е изд., испр. и доп. - М., 2002.

  5. Бобохонова Л.Т. Инглиз тили стилистикаси. Тошкент, 1995.

  6. Знаменская Т.А. . Стилистика английского языка. Основы курса. М., 2005.

  7. Кузнец М.Д., Скребнев Ю.М. Стилистика английского языка. - Л., 1986.

  8. Кухаренко В.В. Интерпретация текста. М., 1988.

  9. Молчанова Г.Г. Английский как неродной: текст, стиль, культура, коммуникация. - М., 2007.

  10. Мороховский А.Н., Воробьёва О.П. и др. «Стилистика английского языка» - Киев, 1984.

  11. Essays on Modern Stylistics” Ed. by D.C. Freeman. L - N.Y. 1981.

  12. Essays on Style and language” Ed. by R. Towler. L., 1967.

GLOSSARY
meaning



    • representation of a concept;

    • takes one of the properties, by which a concept is characterised and makes it represent the concept as a whole;

    • in reference to concept becomes, as it were, a kind of ;

    • a component (the inner form) of the word through which a concept is communicated (Antrushina)

    • presents a structure which is called the semantic structoufrtehe word. contextual meaning

a meaning imposed by and depends on the context; lexical meaning

    • refers the mind to some concrete concept, phenomenon, or thing of objective reality, whether real or imaginary;

    • a means by which a word-form is made to express a definite concept;

    • are closely related to a concept;

    • are sometimes identified with a concept; grammatical meaning (structural meaning)

    • refers our mind to relations between words or to some forms of words or constructions bearing upon their structural functions in the language-as-a-system

emotive meaning

      • also materialises a concept in the word, but, unlike logical meaning, it has reference not directly to things or phenomena of objective reality, but to the feelings and emotions of the speaker towards these thighs or to his emotions as such;

      • bears reference to things, phenomena or ideas through a kind of evaluation of them. contextual emotive meaning

      • an emotive meaning, acquired by a word only in a definite context

e.g.liberty, justice, stunning, smart metaphor
of names based on the associated likeness between two objects, on the similarity of one feature common to two different entities, on possessing one common characteristic, on linguistic semantic nearness, on a common component in their semantic structures. e.g.”pancake” for the “sun” (round, hot, yellow) mixed metaphor
two or more metaphors that sound strange or funny when you use them together
e.g.This is a great headache lifted off my shoulders. metonymy
of names based on contiguity (nearness), on extralinguistic, actually existing relations between the phenomena (objects), denoted by the words, on common grounds of existence in reality but different semantic (V.A.K.) e.g.”cup” and “tea” in “Will you have another cup?”

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