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tmesis
[ tuh-mee-sis ]
noun
- the interpolation of one or more words between the parts of a compound word, as be thou ware for beware.
tmesis
/ ˈmiːsɪs; təˈmiːsɪs /
noun
- interpolation of a word or group of words between the parts of a compound word
Other Words From
- tmet·ic [t, uh, -, met, -ik], adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of tmesis1
Example Sentences
What the grammarians called “tmesis,” the separation of the preposition from the verb with which it is compounded, is peculiar to Homer.
I could see that the figure called, I think, tmesis, or cutting, had been generously employed; the exuberances of the local correspondent had been pruned by a Fleet Street expert.
When accompanied by the preposition kita, "with," there is a tmesis of the preposition, and the pronouns are placed between its first and second syllable; e.g. vi, him''-ki-ni-ta, "with him."
The use of tmesis, asyndeton, anacoluthon, aposiopesis, hyperbaton, hyperbole, litotes, in Latin oratory and poetry.
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