General problems of stylistics
Phonetic Stylistic Devices
Lexical stylistic devices
Lexical stylistic devices 2
Syntactical Stylistic Devices
100

The word ‘style’ is derived from...

the Latin word stilos which means ‘a short stick sharp at the one end and flat at the other’ used by the Romans for writing on wax tablets

100

natural sounds, as ding-dong, burr, bang, cuckoo are examples of ...

Direct onomatopoeia

100

A  ...........  is a figure of speech that describes an object or action in a way that isn’t literally true, but helps explain an idea or make a comparison.

metaphor

100

_______from the Greek word, which means ‘unexpected’. It is a statement that appears to be self-contradictory or silly but may include a latent truth

paradox

100

________ comes from Latin word inversio and means overturn.

inversion


200

In his work Poetics,WHO laid the foundations of stylistics by analyzing diction (lexis), figurative language, and the appropriateness of style to genre, plot, and character?

Aristotle

200

“The fair breeze blew, the white foam flew,

The furrow followed free;

We were the first that ever burst

Into that silent sea.”           

Find SD

alliteration

200

¨She sings like a professional singer.

¨The reforms are as slow as they were last year. 

Are these simile?

They are  logical comparison, not simile

200

little big man, the poorest millionaire, sweet sorrow, nice rascal, pleasantly ugly face, horribly beautiful, deafening silence, poor little rich girl, unpleasant pleasure, adult children, blind eye, buried alive, agree to disagree

oxymoron

200

“What can any woman mean to a man in comparison with his mother?”

(Richard Aldington)

Find SD

rhetorical question

300

The First Linguistic Work on Style

1905 - Charles Bally

 “Précis de Stylistique”

(Preferences on Stylistics)

300

“Twinkle, twinkle little star

  How I wonder what you are.”     

Find SD    

incomplete vowel rhyme

300

•Gandalf the Grey (and later the White)

•Richard the Lionheart

•Grey-eyed Athena

•Iron lady

•Elizabeth the Great. They are examples of ......

true epithet

300

The fog comes
on little cat feet.
It sits looking
over harbor(гавань) and city
on silent haunches
and then moves on.

Find SD

Personification

300

“The coffee came – hot and good - the whole ring of cake.”

Find SD

detached construction

400

Branches of stylistics are:

•  Linguistic stylistics  •  Literary stylistics

•  Functional stylistics  • Comparative stylistics    

• Stylistic Decoding

400

“Poetry is old, ancient, goes back far. It is among the oldest of living things. So old it is that no man knows how and why the first poems came.”

Find SD

assonance

400

Find SD 

A pair of eyes was watching me

synecdoche

400

“Killing time with a book was not much better than killing pheasants and time with a gun.”

Find SD

A pun (or paronomasia)

400

“He became one of the prominent men of the House. Spoke clearly and modestly, and was newer too long."

Find SD

ellipsis

500

Modern branches of Stylistics are:

•cognitive stylistics

•discourse stylistics

•a method in language teaching and language learning

•creative writing

•feminist stylistics

500

Iamb,Trochee,Anapest,Dactyl,Monosyllable,Spondee... What are they?

Types of feet (rhythm)

500

•The police station gets robbed

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Irony

500

............ –  is a genre which represents an idea or belief, 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.

  Thus an_______ is a story with two meanings, a literal meaning and a symbolic meaning (Aesop Fables)

 allegory

500

“He couldn’t spy on her. If she wanted to keep things from him – she must; he couldn’t spy on her."

Find SD

frame repetition