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Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Words for today: Metonym and Synecdoche

Metonym is a new word for me--and I thought I knew all the --nyms! You know, homonym, synonym, antonym...  Per Lexic.us, metonym is:
A word that denotes one thing but refers to a related thing. "Plastic is a metonym for credit card."
Websters elaborates on that:
A figure of speech consisting of the use of the name of one thing for that of another of which it is an attribute or with which it is associated, as "crown" in "lands belonging to the crown."
These are metonyms because:
  • Credit cards are made of plastic.
  • The king (or queen) wears a crown.
Trying to think of some other metonyms to make it stick in my brain. How about these:
  • The White House called today. (Someone who lives or works in the White House called.)
  • I'm thirsty for some suds. (Beer has suds; I want a beer.)
  • You can rent some fancy wheels. (Cars have wheels; you can rent fancy cars.)
Synecdoche is a specific type of metonym. (That is, synecdoches are metonyms, and apparently some people don't distinguish between them.) The distinction is this:
  • It is a synecdoche if it is an actual component of the thing referenced (like "plastic,", "suds," and "wheels," above).
  • It is a metonym if it is closely associated with the thing referenced but isn't actually a part of it (like "crown" (I think--although one could maybe argue it's a synecdoche also) and "White House").
Wikipedia provides great reading in these articles:
Now, go thee forth and metonymize!

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Thanks for the two new words added to my repertoire. Enjoy reading your posts.

Elf said...

Thanks! I need to work on incorporating these two words into my working vocabulary, or I'll forget again what they mean.

Jc_Freak: said...

Hi. found this site while looking for the name of a synecdochal list (a list of items which represents the whole category). You mentioned that you thought you know all of the 'nyms'. Might I also suggest looking into hyernym and hyponym. A hyponym is a term whose word map is completely encapsulated by the word map of its hypernym. For instance, synecdoche is a hyponym of metanym while in turn metanym is a hypernym for synecdoche.

Elf said...

Oh, my. See what I missed by majoring in computer science rather than linguistics? Thanks for the additional words.