different between phonaesthesia vs phonaesthetic

phonaesthesia

English

Alternative forms

  • phonesthesia

Etymology

Apparently coined by British linguist John Rupert Firth.

Noun

phonaesthesia (uncountable)

  1. (linguistics) Any correspondence between the sound of a word and its meaning; examples include onomatopoeia and the use of phonaesthemes.
    • 1984, Laurence Picken, Musica Asiatica, Volume 4, page 214,
      For this latter term, phonaesthesia is doubtless at work, since kring is also ‘the sound of a small bell’.
    • 2010, Katie Wales, Northern English in Writing, Raymond Hickey (editor), Varieties of English in Writing: The written word as linguistic evidence, page 74,
      In contrast, writers of bucolic dialogues, like George Meriton, for instance, and lively song-writers like Robert Anderson in Cumberland, seem drawn to expressive lexis, marked by sound patterns of reduplication, alliteration and phonaesthesia.
    • 2011, Prue Goodwin, The Literate Classroom, page 41,
      Phonaesthesia refers to the vaguer phenomenon whereby families of words with shared phonemes sometimes evoke related meanings in a not-quite-echoic manner.
    • 2011, Jean Boase-Beier, A Critical Introduction to Translation Studies, page 11,
      Those in (1.15) illustrate a weaker type of iconicity, generally known as phonaesthesia: the consonant cluster ‘fl’ seems to suggest quick movement, but it is not a direct representation of movement, or speed.

Synonyms

  • sound symbolism
  • synaesthesia

Derived terms

  • phonaesthetic
  • phonaesthetics

Related terms

  • ideophone
  • phonaestheme

phonaesthesia From the web:



phonaesthetic

English

Alternative forms

  • phonesthetic

Adjective

phonaesthetic (comparative more phonaesthetic, superlative most phonaesthetic)

  1. Exhibiting phonaesthesia.

Anagrams

  • enthesopathic

phonaesthetic From the web:

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