- •1. Stylistics and its objectives. Subdivision of stylistics.
- •2. The notion of style. Different points of view on the concept of style.
- •3. Classification of fs
- •4. The scientific prose style (the substyles of humanities and exact sciences).
- •5. The style of news media (print journalism)
- •6. The style of advertising
- •7. The style of official documents (the substyles of diplomatic and legal documents).
- •8. The belles-letters style (the substyle of emotive prose)
- •9. The belles-lettres style (the substyle of drama)
- •10. The colloquial style
- •11. The belles-lettres style (the substyle of poetry)
- •12. The style of news media (broadcast journalism)
- •13. Text stylistics. Types of information.Basic textual segments.Text categories.
- •14. The style of religion
- •15. Stylistic function, stylistic information, stylistic norm
- •16. The style of official documents
- •17. Correlation of notions functional style and discourse.
- •19. The notion of functional style, individual style and idiolect.
- •21.Concept of imagery.Tropes.
- •22.Graphical stylistic means.
- •23.1.Metaphor. Types of metaphors.
- •24. Ssd (peculiar arrangement)
- •25. Ssd (peculiar arrangement)
- •4.Framing (a …a)
- •26. Ssd (peculiar linkage)
- •27. Ssd (peculiar stylistic use of structural
- •28.Ssd (peculiar use of colloquial constructions)
- •32. Classification of lexical stylistic devices.
- •33. Zeugma and pun.
- •34. Oxymoron. Antonomasia
- •2)A common noun acquires a nominal meaning and is used as a proper noun.
- •36. Simile.
- •37. Epithet.
- •38. Periphrasis.
- •30. Morphological stylistic means. Noun and pronoun.
- •31. Morphological stylistic means. Adjective and verb.
- •29. Phonetic stylistic devices.
- •39. Hyperbole and Irony
- •35. Metonymy.
- •40. Stylistic use of set expressions
24. Ssd (peculiar arrangement)
Stylistic inversion differs from grammatical inversion. Stylistic inversion does not change the grammatical essence of the sentence. it consists in an unusual displacement of words in order to make one of them more conspicuous, more important, more emphatic, to make a logical stress on it or to add some expressive and emotive colour.Inversion may be complete – when the predicate is displaced, partial – with the displacement of secondary members of the sentence.There are 5 most frequent structural types of inversion:the object is placed in pre-position,the attribute is placed after the word it modifies,the adverbial modifier is placed at the beginning,both the modifier and predicate stand before the subject.
Detachment is an attribution of greater significance to а secondary member of the sentence, usu. an attribute or an adverbial modifier, due to which it is formally separated from the word it syntactically depends on.Due to the special stress laid on it, the detached word (phrase) often appears to be opposed to what precedes or follows it.
Hence, the stylistic effect of detachment is strengthening, emphasizing the word (phrase) in question.detachment produces a stronger effect and sounds more independent. In oral speech a detached unit is marked by prominent intonation which in writing is indicated by the use of such punctuation marks as commas, full stops or dashes.
A variant of detachment is parenthesis. It is an explanatory or qualifying remark put into a sentence.
Parallelism is a repetition of identical or similar syntactical patterns in two or more successive units.In case of absolute identity in the repeated patterns, we speak about complete parallelism or balance. If the identity is partial, parallelism becomes partial or incomplete. Parallel constructions are often backed up by repetition of words (lexical repetition) and conjunctions and prepositions (polysyndeton).
Parallelism performs different functions.
It contributes to rhythmic and melodic unification of adjacent sentences. It also either helps to emphasize the repeated element, or to create a contrast, or else underlines the semantic connection and equality between sentences.In the belles-lettres style parallel constructions carry an emotive function.
Chiasmus is sometimes characterized as 'parallelism reversed': it is also based on the repetition of syntactical patterns, but it has a reversed or inverted order in one of the two utterances. E.g. He came in and out went she.
The segments that change places enter opposite or contrastive logical relations, which fact produces various stylistic effects.
Like parallel constructions, chiasmus contributes to the rhythmical quality of the utterance, and the pause caused by the change in the syntactical pattern may be likened to a caesura in prosody.
Antithesis denotes any active confrontation, emphasized co-occurrence of notions, really or presumably opposed by means of dictionary or contextual antonyms.
The purpose of using this device is to demonstrate the contradictory nature of the referent, to compare things through a contrast and to attribute rhythm to the utterance.
This device is often signalled by the introductory connectives but or and.
In case of developed antithesis we deal with semantically opposed statements or pictures.
Antithesis differs from contrast as a literary technique. Contrast is a literary (not linguistic) device based on logical opposition between different phenomena.
