Aphorismus

Aphorismus (from the Greek: ἀφορισμός, aphorismós, "a marking off", also "rejection, banishment") is a figure of speech that calls into question if a word is properly used ("How can you call yourself a man?").[1] It often appears in the form of a rhetorical question which is meant to imply a difference between the present thing being discussed and the general notion of the subject.

Examples

  • "For you have but mistook me all this while. / I live with bread like you, feel want, / Taste grief, need friends: subjected thus, / How can you say to me I am a king?" William Shakespeare, Richard II Act 3, scene 2, 174-177
  • "It depends on what the meaning of the word 'is' is." Bill Clinton, August 17, 1998
gollark: This is true.
gollark: Essentially, none are safe.
gollark: You do *not* have the GTech™ generalized food production systems, which are capable of producing chocolate.
gollark: > The SinthTech™️ Inc. Memetic Research & Neutralisation Agency (mRNA) has so far discovered everything there is to know about memeticsThis is highly implausible.
gollark: I can't not neither unconfirm nor antideny the non-use of no memetics which might or might not be more powerful or less powerful or equally powerful compared to the lesser memetics which are potentially in use by some entities who may or may not exist.

See also

References

  1. Myers, Wukasch (2003). The Dictionary of Poetic Terms. University of NORTH TEXAS Press. p. 22. ISBN 1574411667.
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