Rhetorical Meaning

Authors

  • Susan F. Schmerling 815 W. Slaughter Lane, Apt. 150 Austin, Texas, 78748 USA

Keywords:

rhetorical meaning, English, French, Spanish, reduplication, diminutives, intensity, attenuation

Abstract

This paper introduces rhetorical meaning to semantic theory; we use the term by analogy to tropes like metonymy in classical rhetoric, which yields ‘the American president’ from the White House—that is, it substitutes one referential meaning for another. Here we focus on two rhetorical meanings: intensificationand attenuation. Intensification is expressed in English and many other languages by total reduplication (an old old man); attenuation is exemplified by Spanish ‘synthetic’ diminutive forms (hombrecito‘little man’; cf. hombre ‘man’) and English and French ‘analytic’ formations (My Little Chickadee(film); petitcaporal ‘Little Corporal’ (Napoléon Bonaparte)). Formally, a rhetorical meaning is a relationwith one referential meaning as its domain and, as its codomain, a set of related referential meanings, the particular set specified by the rhetorical meaning at hand. The selection from among elements of the codomain, which can even seem contradictory out of context, is in fact highly context-dependent and indicates a critical role for pragmatics in an overall account of this meaning type.

Downloads

Published

24-04-2019 — Updated on 05-02-2021

Versions