The purple garment ( a metonymic symbol of the divine passion ) is spread out in a light fold; only the chromatic couple of yellow and blue in the foreground raises a separate note which approaches, in power, the glorifying hymn of the red.
32.
Metonymic surnames, on the other hand, denoted a person's profession, and include Pease, for a seller of peas, and Onions, for a seller of onions ( though some people with that surname got it from the Old Welsh name Enniaum ).
33.
Within logical polysemies, a large class of mappings may be considered to be a case of metonymic transfer ( e . g . " chicken " for the bird, as well as its meat; " crown " for the object, as well as the institution ).
34.
In his 1956 essay, " The Metaphoric and Metonymic Poles ", Roman Jakobson describes the couple as representing the possibilities of linguistic selection ( metaphor ) and combination ( metonymy ); Jakobson's work became important for such French structuralists as Claude L�vi-Strauss and Roland Barthes.
35.
The analyst searches the analysand s discourse for sounds, words, or images of fixation and through dialectization attempt to bring these fixations to the regular metonymic flow of the ( unconscious ) symbolic order, thereby integrating the subject further into their fantasy, usually referred to as traversing the fantasy .
36.
In cases that a metonymic shift would be otherwise revealed nearby, the whole sentence may be recast to avoid the metonymy . ( For example, " The team are fighting among themselves " may become " the team " members " are fighting among themselves " or simply " The team is fighting . ")
37.
In a study of media and popular culture in South Asia, author Mahasveta Barua draws parallel between the film's metaphorical representation of the mother as nation, and the metonymic identification with India that Indira Gandhi, India's only woman prime minister, sought and tried for during her tenure ( 1966 77, and 1980 84 ).
38.
In Mesopotamia the brewer's craft was the only profession which derived social sanction and divine protection from female deities / goddesses, specifically : Ninkasi, who covered the production of beer, Siris, who was used in a metonymic way to refer to beer, and Siduri, who covered the enjoyment of beer . until the industrialization of brewing began.
39.
The name is derived from the Portuguese word " correia ", meaning " a leather strap or belt " ( Latin " corrigia ", " fastening, " from " corrigere ", " to straighten or to correct " ), applied as a metonymic occupational name for a maker or seller of leather belts and straps.
40.
There is, for example, Einstein's E ( equals ) mc2, which Dr . Peter Galison, a Harvard historian and physicist, describes in the book as " a metonymic of technical knowledge writ large, " adding, " Our ambitions for science, our dreams of understanding and our nightmares of destruction find themselves packed into a few scribbles of the pen ."