| 31. | Metonymy skates on top of periphrasis in just basically a grotesquery of the way a sentence ought to be ordered.
|
| 32. | Metonymy, in this case, ignores other integral parts of Matsu and provides an incomplete picture of Lienchiang County.
|
| 33. | In the heroic age, metonymy and synecdoche support the development of feudal or monarchic institutions embodied by idealized figures.
|
| 34. | The couple metaphor-metonymy had a prominent role in the renewal of the field of rhetoric in the 1960s.
|
| 35. | And so, by metonymy, is the character, vermin to the core, whose odious lips it recently touched.
|
| 36. | A related meaning shift is metonymy, where one builds a new concept out of an element of the original concept.
|
| 37. | Metonymy refers to the ability of a sign to represent something entirely, while literally only being a part of it.
|
| 38. | Metaphor, like other types of analogy, can usefully be distinguished from metonymy as one of two fundamental modes of thought.
|
| 39. | In addition to its use in everyday speech, metonymy is a figure of speech in some poetry and in much rhetoric.
|
| 40. | I'd say that the default reading involves metonymy : the restaurant stands in for the food that is served there.
|