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: ++bee <@!319753218592866315>
gollark: Excellent. Thing exported.
gollark: I have resolved one particular problem. There is less standing between me and meme OCR.
gollark: Idea: I make Macron but it's just osmarkslisp™+forth.
gollark: Just use the Macron combinators to rewrite the AST attributes as expanded runtime queen logic.
See also
References
- Myers, Wukasch (2003). The Dictionary of Poetic Terms. University of NORTH TEXAS Press. p. 22. ISBN 1574411667.
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