- •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
25. Ssd (peculiar arrangement)
Lexico-Syntactical Repetition is a regular recurrence of a lexical unit, sometimes in close succession. It can be viewed as an expressive means of the language used to make an emotional impact and intensify the feelings. Besides, it ascribes rhythm to the utterance; at times it shows the monotony or continuity of action.In lexico-syntactical repetitions, unlike in purely syntactical repetitions (parallelism or chiasmus), where the lexical identity of certain parts of neighbouring sentences is optional, the recurrence of the same lexical units is quite obligatory. Compositionally lexico-syntactical repetition falls into:
1.Simple Repetition 2.Anaphora (a…, a…)
Function. Anaphoric recurrence strengthens the element that recurs, helps the reader (hearer) fix it in his memory. It also imparts a certain rhythmical regularity to the syntactical units in question.
3.Epiphora (… a, … a)
Function. Epiphora, to a still greater extent than anaphora, regularizes the rhythm of the text and makes prose resemble poetry.
A combination of anaphora and epiphora in two or more adjacent units is sometimes termed symploca.
4.Framing (a …a)
Function. Framing makes the whole utterance more compact and more complete. It is most effective in singling out paragraphs.
5.Anadiplosis (linking, reduplication, catch repetition) (… a, a…)
6.Chain Repetition (…a, a… b, b …)
It is the sequence of several anadiploses.
There also exists synonymic repetition.
The two terms frequently used to group all kinds of synonymic repetitions are pleonasm and tautology.Pleonasm-the use of more words in a sentence than are necessary to express the meaning; redundancy of expression.There is a variety of tautology called root-repetition. In it not the same words but the same root that is repeated(a brutish brute)
Enumeration.In enumeration separate things, properties, actions and phenomena are brought together in the manner that they make a series of grammatically and semantically homogeneous parts of utterance.
The enumerated notions are usu. associated with each other due to some kind of relation between them: dependence, cause and result, likeness, dissimilarity, sequence, experience.
Enumeration attracts attention by the resultant rhythm and sometimes creates the atmosphere of tension.Though, enumeration becomes a stylistic device proper when the effect of semantic homogeneity of heterogeneous words, i.e. words belonging to different semantic fields and groups, is produced.This kind of chaotic distribution performs an evident stylistic function as it causes a striking effect.
Suspense is based on the delay of the most important information. As a result, the less important facts and subordinate details appear first, while the most significant idea is withheld till the end of the syntactical unit.
Suspense is often created by the insertion of a subordinate clause (or a parenthetic remark) between the members of the principal clause.
Sentences with suspense are called periodic sentences, or periods. Their function is to keep the reader in a state of uncertainty, expectation and interest.
Climax and gradation are two synonymous terms that denote such an arrangement of correlative ideas or notions in which what precedes is less than what follows. The correlative notions in climax belong to the same semantic plane and are often called ‘ideographic synonyms’.
In climax the participating words, phrases, sentences form the ‘ascent’, or an ‘ascending scale’.In logical climax every consecutive word is stronger from the logical point of view. In emotional climax the emotive intensity is implied. Quantitative climax is based on the intensification of quantitative parametres.Climax is usu. materialized in enumeration. The stylistic function of climax is to disclose the emotional tension of the character, to impress upon the reader the significance of the things described by suggested comparison, or to depict phenomena dynamically.Anti-climax (back-gradation) consists in the abrupt descent, which frequently contrasts with the previous rise. This ruins the elevated tenor and brings down the whole idea. That is why anticlimax is frequently used by humorists.
