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1、Lesson Hiroshimathe Liveliest City in Japan修辞学习Hiroshima-the Liveliest City in Japan RHETORIC tenor (subject): the concept, object, or person meant in a metaphor vehicle (reference): a medium through which something is expressed, achieved, or displayed Simile: A simile makes a comparison between two
2、 unlike things having at least one quality or characteristic in common. The two things compared must be dissimilar and the basis of resemblance is usually an abstract quality. The vehicle is almost always introduced by the word like or as. Self-criticism is as necessary to us as air or water. The wa
3、ter lay grey and wrinkled like an elephants skin. My very thoughts were like the ghostly rustle of dead leaves. The bus went as slowly as a snail. Her eyes were jet black, and her hair was like a waterfall. The comparison is purely imaginative, that is, the resemblance between the two unlike things
4、in that one particular aspect exists only in our minds, and not in the nature of the things themselves. As cold waters to a thirsty soul, so is good news from a far country. Metaphor: A metaphor, like a simile, also makes a comparison between two unlike things, but the comparison is implied rather t
5、han stated. Some say it the substitution of one thing for another, or the identification of two things from different ranges of thought. Contrary to a simile in which the resemblance between two unlike things is clearly stated, in a metaphor nothing is mentioned. It is often loosely defined as an im
6、plied comparison, a simile without like or as. Metaphor is considered the most important and basic poetic figure and also the commonest the most beautiful. Snow clothes the ground. The town was stormed after a long siege. Boys and girls, tumbling in the streets and playing, were moving jewels. I had
7、 a lump in my throat At last this intermezzo came to an end. I was again crushed by the thought. .when the meaning . sank in, jolting me. Metonymy(借代): In Latin, meta means change while onyma means name, so metonymy means the change of name. Metonymy is a figure of speech that has to do with the sub
8、stitution of the name of one thing for that of another. This substituted name may be an attribute of that other thing or be closely associated with it. In other words, it involves a change of name. She was a girl who excited the emotions, but I was not one to let my heart rule my head. He took to th
9、e bottle. .little old Japan adrift amid beige concrete skyscrapers .struggle between kimono and the miniskirt I thought that Hiroshima still felt the impact Metonymy can be derived from various sources: a. Names of persons Uncle Sam: the USA b. Animals the bear: the Soviet Union the dragon : the Chi
10、nese (a fight between the bear and the dragon) c. Parts of the body heart: feelings and emotions head, brain: wisdom, intelligence, reason grey hair: old age d. Profession: the press: newspapers, reporters etc. He met the press yesterday evening at the Grand Hotel. the bar: the legal profession e. l
11、ocation of government, business etc. Downing Street: the British Government the White House: the US president and his government the Capital Hill: US Congress Wall Street: US financial circles Hollywood: American filmmaking industry Euphemism: the substitution of an agreeable or inoffensive expressi
12、on for one that may offend or suggest sth unpleasant eg: He was sentenced to prison-He is now living at the governments expenses. The boy is a bit slow for his age. to go to heaven-dead to go to the bathroom, do ones business, answer the natures call, put an end to my life. Each day of suffering tha
13、t helps to free me from earthly cares. Irony: Hiroshima-the Liveliest City in Japan the good fortune that my illness has brought me Anti-Climax: 渐降法,虎头蛇尾 a town known throughout the world for its-oysters Alliteration: slip to a stop tested and treated Rhetorical Question Was I not at the scene of the crime?