| 21. | Whether or not it is " correct ", I think the intended meaning generally involves metonymy.
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| 22. | Instead of more conventional literary allusions, Hemingway relied on repetitive metaphors or metonymy to build images.
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| 23. | The word draws its metonymy from the pseudoscience of phrenology, and was originally simply a physical descriptor.
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| 24. | Later, she used a theory of metonymy to rethink the application of mantras in early Indian ritual.
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| 25. | Regardless of the particular translation, the title is ultimately metonymy for the natural world as a whole.
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| 26. | Similarly, metalepsis is closely related to metonymy, and is sometimes understood as a specific kind of metonymy.
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| 27. | Similarly, metalepsis is closely related to metonymy, and is sometimes understood as a specific kind of metonymy.
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| 28. | What is carried across from " fishing fish " to " fishing pearls " is the domain of metonymy.
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| 29. | The author describes the process of metonymy to us saying that we first figure out what a word means.
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| 30. | In the 1950s the concept was used by linguist Roman Jakobson in his influential lecture on metaphor and metonymy.
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