different between anastrophe vs inversion
anastrophe
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Ancient Greek ????????? (anastroph?).
Noun
anastrophe (countable and uncountable, plural anastrophes)
- (rhetoric) Unusual word order, often involving an inversion of the usual pattern of the sentence.
- Synonyms: inversion, hyperbaton
Related terms
- anastrophic
- anastrophism
Translations
See also
- anastrophe on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
French
Pronunciation
Noun
anastrophe f (plural anastrophes)
- anastrophe
anastrophe From the web:
- what apostrophe means
- what is anastrophe in literature
- what does apostrophe mean
- what does anastrophe refer to
- what is anastrophe and examples
- what does apostrophe do
- what is anastrophe in poetry
- what does anastrophe
inversion
English
Pronunciation
- (General American) IPA(key): /?n?v???n/
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?n?v????n/
- Rhymes: -??(?)??n
Noun
inversion (countable and uncountable, plural inversions)
- The action of inverting.
- Being in an inverted state; being upside down or in a reverse sequence.
- (music) The reversal of an interval; the move of one pitch in an interval up or down an octave.
- (music) The position of a chord which has a note other than the root as its bass note.
- (music) The flipping of a melody or contrapuntal line so that high notes become low and vice versa; the reversal of a pitch contour.
- (genetics) A segment of DNA in the context of a chromosome that is reversed in orientation relative to a reference karyotype or genome.
- (meteorology) A situation where air temperature increases with altitude (the ground being colder than the surrounding air).
- Synonym: temperature inversion
- (grammar) Deviation from standard word order by putting the predicate before the subject. It takes place in questions with auxiliary verbs and in normal, affirmative clauses beginning with a negative particle, for the purpose of emphasis.
- Question formation involves the phenomenon commonly known as subject-auxiliary inversion, a change in word order in which the auxiliary moves in front of the subject.
(a) Here we shall describe this phenomenon in terms of movement of the element under INFL into COMP position.
(b) According to this analysis, what looks like an exchanging of positions between the subject and auxiliary (or INFL element, in GB terms) is actually the movement of the INFL element past the subject position into COMP.
(c) INFL-to-COMP movement seems to be triggered by the presence of the [+WH] feature in COMP.
- Question formation involves the phenomenon commonly known as subject-auxiliary inversion, a change in word order in which the auxiliary moves in front of the subject.
- (algebra) An operation on a group, analogous to negation.
- (psychology, obsolete) Homosexuality, particularly in early psychoanalysis.
- 1897, W. Havelock Ellis, Sexual Inversion, p. 202:
- We can seldom, therefore, congratulate ourselves on the success of any "cure" of inversion.
- 1897, W. Havelock Ellis, Sexual Inversion, p. 202:
Derived terms
Translations
See also
- twelve tone technique
- serialism
References
- (music) DeLone et. al. (Eds.) (1975). Aspects of Twentieth-Century Music. Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice-Hall. ?ISBN, Ch. 6.
- (genetics) Lars Feuk, Andrew R. Carson and Stephen W. Scherer (February 2006). "Structural variation in the human genome," Nature, 7:85.
- (genetics) Freeman et al., "Copy number variation: New insights into genome diversity" Genome Res 2006; 16: 949-61. — "DNA copy number variation has long been associated with specific chromosomal rearrangements and genomic disorders, but its ubiquity in mammalian genomes was not fully realized until recently. Although our understanding of the extent of this variation is still developing, it seems likely that, at least in humans, copy number variants (CNVs) account for a substantial amount of genetic variation."
French
Noun
inversion f (plural inversions)
- inversion
- deviance (especially sexual)
Venetian
Etymology
Compare Italian inversione
Noun
inversion f (invariable)
- inversion (all senses)
- reversal, reversing
inversion From the web:
- what inversion is 65
- what inversion is 64
- what inversion is 6
- what inversion is 42
- what inversion is this triad shown in
- what inversion is 5/3
- what inversion is 63
- what inversion is 7
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