Translation for '
synecdoche' from English to Bulgarian
| NOUN1 | a synecdoche | synecdoches |
| NOUN2 | synecdoche | - |
NOUN article.ind sg | pl
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Usage Examples English
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- , was a synecdoche for the central government of the Ottoman Empire in Istanbul.
- Other tropes that may be used to increase the level of allusion include irony, litotes, simile, and metonymy (particularly synecdoche).
- For Hayden White, tropes historically unfolded in this sequence: metaphor, metonymy, synecdoche, and finally, irony.
- Pareyon’s output in the field of semiotics is significant mainly through his capital contributions of "polar semiotics", "intersemiotic continuum" and "intersemiotic synecdoche".
- The phrase "green eyeshades" can be used as a synecdoche for individuals who are excessively concerned with financial matters or small and insignificant details.
- Within modern American cannabis culture, the term "bowl" is often used as a synecdoche to refer to an entire smoking device, especially a glass pipe.
- In two different election pamphlets, Éamon de Valera's Fianna Fáil party addressed voters as "Dalcassians", the term having become a romantic synecdoche for the Irish as a whole.
- Synecdoche is also popular in advertising. Since synecdoche uses a part to represent a whole, its use requires the audience to make associations and "fill in the gaps", engaging with the ad by thinking about the product.
- The last two are defined as change between whole and part, which would today be rendered as "synecdoche".
- ... , with Dom being used in German language - pars pro toto - as a synecdoche for collegiate churches and cathedrals alike) was erected between 1389 and 1485.
- The inverse of a "pars pro toto" is a "totum pro parte", in which the whole is used to describe a part. The term "synecdoche" is used for both.
- The "robe of golden thread" is a synecdoche for Li Qi's official career.
- The phrase is occasionally used as metonym or synecdoche for the tribunal of men (also called "regicides") who ordered the king's execution.
- , its main dialect, through synecdoche.
- Like Downing Street, Quai d'Orsay or – formerly – Wilhelmstrasse, the address has become a synecdoche for governmental power.
- Kramer explains this was the most difficult speech he had ever written. George W. Bush was re-elected on the trope of "moral values," which served as a synecdoche for gay men and lesbians.
- The majority of icons are encoded and decoded using metonymy, synecdoche, and metaphor.
- Lord Hoffmann in that same decision observed that a patentee may have intended a word or phrase to have not a literal but rather a figurative meaning, the figure being a form of synecdoche - (a form of the metaphor in which the part mentioned signifies the whole); or metonymy (a form of metaphor denoting the relation between two objects.
- The traditional Chinese symbol for civilization and state was "gu" "grains; cereals" (a synecdoche for "agricultural products").
© dict.cc English-Bulgarian dictionary 2024
Contains translations by TU Chemnitz and Mr Honey's Business Dictionary (German-English only).
Links to this dictionary or to individual translations are very welcome!