Figures of Speech: Schemes and Tropes
Schemes and Tropes
Schemes and tropes are figures of speech, having to do with using language in an unusual or “figured” way:
Trope: An artful deviation from the ordinary or principal signification of a word. A trope uses a word in an unusual or unexpected way.
Scheme: An artful deviation from the ordinary arrangement of words. A scheme is a creative alteration in the usual order of words.
Examples
“I work like a slave” [trope: simile]
“I don’t know if I’m working my job or my job, me” [schemes: antimetabole, ellipsis, personification]
Kinds of Tropes
Trope: An artful deviation from the ordinary or principal signification of a word.
Reference to One Thing as Another
- Metaphor Reference to one thing as another, implying a comparison.
- Simile Explicit comparison of one thing to another.
- Synecdoche A whole is represented by naming one of its parts.
- Metonymy Reference to something or someone by naming one of its attributes.
- Personification Reference to abstractions or inanimate objects as though they had human qualities or abilities.
Wordplay and puns
- Antanaclasis Repetition of a word in two different senses.
- Paronomasia Using words that sound alike but that differ in meaning (punning).
- Syllepsis Using a word differently in relation to two or more words that it modifies or governs (sometimes called zeugma).
- Onomatopoeia Use of words whose sound correspond with their semantic value.
Substitutions
- Anthimeria Substitution of one part of speech for another.
- Periphrasis Substitution of a descriptive word or phrase for a proper name or of a proper name for a quality associated with the name.
Overstatement/Understatement
- Hyperbole Use of exaggerated terms for emphasis or effect.
- Auxesis Reference to something with a name disproportionately greater than its nature (a kind of hyberbole).
- Litotes Understatement used deliberately.
- Meiosis Reference to something with a name disproportionately lesser than its nature (a kind of litotes).
Semantic Inversions
- Rhetorical Question Asking a question for a purpose other than obtaining the information requested.
- Irony Using language in such a way as to convey a meaning opposite of what the terms used denote (often by exaggeration).
- Oxymoron Placing two ordinarily opposing terms adjacent to one another. A compressed paradox.
- Paradox An apparently contradictory statement that contains a measure of truth.
Kinds of Schemes
Scheme: An artful deviation from the ordinary arrangement of words.
Structures of Balance
- Parallelism Similarity of structure in a pair or series of related words, phrases, or clauses.
- Isocolon A series of similarly structured elements having the same length.
- Tricolon Three parallel elements of the same length occurring together.
- Antithesis Juxtaposition of contrasting ideas (often in parallel structure).
- Climax Generally, the arrangement of words, phrases, or clauses in an order of increasing importance, often in parallel structure.
Change in Word Order
- Anastrophe Inversion of natural word order.
- Parenthesis Insertion of a verbal unit that interrupts normal syntactical flow.
- Apposition Addition of an adjacent, coordinate, explanatory element.
Omission
- Ellipsis Omission of a word or words readily implied by context.
- Asyndeton Omission of conjunctions between a series of clauses.
- Brachylogia Omission of conjunctions between a series of words.
- (Polysyndeton) Opposite of asyndeton, a superabundance of conjunctions
Repetition
- Alliteration Repetition of initial or medial consonants in two or more adjacent words.
- Assonance Repetition of similar vowel sounds, preceded and followed by different consonants, in the stressed syllables of adjacent words.
- Polyptoton Repetition of words derived from the same root.
- Antanaclasis Repetition of a word in two different senses.
- Anaphora Repetition of the same word or group of words at the beginning of successive clauses.
- Epistrophe Repetition of the same word or group of words at the ends of successive clauses.
- Epanalepsis Repetition at the end of a clause of the word that occurred at the beginning of the clause.
- Anadiplosis Repetition of the last word of one clause at the beginning of the following clause.
- Climax Repetition of the scheme anadiplosis at least three times, with the elements arranged in an order of increasing importance.
- Antimetabole Repetition of words, in successive clauses, in reverse grammatical order. (Sometimes mistaken as chiasmus)
- Chiasmus Repetition of grammatical structures in reverse order in successive phrases or clauses (not to be mistaken with antimetabole).
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.
Gideon O. Burton, Brigham Young University
Please cite “Silva Rhetoricae” (rhetoric.byu.edu)