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zeugma
[ zoog-muh ]
noun
- the use of a word to modify or govern two or more words when it is appropriate to only one of them or is appropriate to each but in a different way, as in to wage war and peace or On his fishing trip, he caught three trout and a cold. Compare syllepsis.
zeugma
/ zjuːɡˈmætɪk; ˈzjuːɡmə /
noun
- a figure of speech in which a word is used to modify or govern two or more words although appropriate to only one of them or making a different sense with each, as in the sentence Mr. Pickwick took his hat and his leave (Charles Dickens)
Derived Forms
- zeugˈmatically, adverb
- zeugmatic, adjective
Other Words From
- zeug·mat·ic [zoog-, mat, -ik], adjective
- zeug·mati·cal·ly adverb
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of zeugma1
Example Sentences
This is a zeugma: the intentional juxtaposition of different senses of a single word.
More omens appear in the encounter with the traveller selling quartz hearts, an incident relayed with a nicely-underlined zeugma when s/he "prophecies a wild affair/ and light rain, though in no particular/ order".
A few may think of rhetoric as a deadly classical discipline devoted to the exhaustive parsing and labeling of figures of speech: zeugma, anyone?
One example at random: "You may not make the headlines, but you can always make the difference" – a zeugma there.
There is a zeugma in speaks as applied to ‘thunder’ and ‘chains,’ unless it be taken as in both cases equivalent to denounces.
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