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paralipsis

[ par-uh-lip-sis ]

noun

, Rhetoric.
, plural par·a·lip·ses [par-, uh, -, lip, -seez].
  1. the suggestion, by deliberately concise treatment of a topic, that much of significance is being omitted, as in “not to mention other faults.”


paralipsis

/ ˌpærəˈlɪpsɪs; ˌpærəˈlaɪpsɪs /

noun

  1. a rhetorical device in which an idea is emphasized by the pretence that it is too obvious to discuss, as in there are many drawbacks to your plan, not to mention the cost
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Word History and Origins

Origin of paralipsis1

First recorded in 1580–90; from Late Latin paralīpsis, from Greek paráleipsis “an omitting,” equivalent to paraleíp(ein) “to leave on one side” (equivalent to para- + leípein “to leave”) + -sis; para- 1, -sis
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Word History and Origins

Origin of paralipsis1

C16: via Late Latin from Greek: neglect, from paraleipein to leave aside, from para- 1+ leipein to leave
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Example Sentences

But to remind Trump, by speaking on behalf of the majority of the country, that everyone is on to him, in a reversal of Trump’s favorite “everyone is saying” paralipsis device:

Trump also used the trope of paralipsis to pave his path to power.

The third unifying strategy is a slippery one called paralipsis, which you translate colloquially as "I'm not saying/I'm just saying."

From Salon

His retweets functioned as a paralipsis: It allowed him to say and not say and provided him with the out of plausible deniability.

From Salon

Trump has stopped using the “wink” of paralipsis since he became president.

From Salon

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Paralipomenonparallactic ellipse