different between anastrophe vs synchysis
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
synchysis
English
Alternative forms
- synchesis
- synchisis
Etymology
Through Latin from the Ancient Greek ???????? (súnkhusis, “a mixing”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?s?n.k?.s?s/
Noun
synchysis (countable and uncountable, plural synchyses)
- (poetics) A complicated, interlocking word-order pattern in early Latin verse, demonstrated by Virgil and his contemporaries.
- (rhetoric) Confused arrangement of words in a sentence
- A confused mixture.
- Fluidity of the vitreous humour of the eye.
See also
- hyperbaton
- anastrophe
References
- Silva Rhetoricae
synchysis From the web:
- what does synchysis mean in latin
- what does synchysis mean
- what does synchysis do
- what is synchysis examples
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