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Figaro rips the innards out of things people say and reveals the rhetorical tricks and pratfalls. For terms and definitions, click here.
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    Friday
    Mar092012

    We'd Like to Meet That Teacher

    This from Ask Figaro:

    Dear Figaro,

    I saw this note on a high school student’s locker: “Caution: Blonde trapped in a brunette’s body.”

    What would you call this? This is the one where a part stands for the whole, right? Is that synecdoche?

    Michael

    Dear Michael,

    Close but no metaphorical cigar! That blonde is a metonymy, which transfers one trait onto another. A synecdoche swaps the part for the whole, while a metonymy takes a characteristic and makes it represent the thing it characterizes. Tricky stuff, I know. To learn more, go to our sister site and read this extremely short detective story:http://www.wordhero.org/story.

    Fig.

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    Reader Comments (2)

    This link is broken.
    June 18, 2012 | Unregistered CommenterJeff
    The URL auto-parser took the closing period as part of the link:

    http://www.wordhero.org/story
    September 6, 2012 | Unregistered CommenterCliff T.

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