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Metaphor

A metaphor is a figure of speech that, for rhetorical effect, directly refers to one thing by mentioning another.[1] It may provide (or obscure) clarity or identify hidden similarities between two different ideas. Metaphors are often compared with other types of figurative language, such as antithesis, hyperbole, metonymy, and simile.[2] One of the most commonly cited examples of a metaphor in English literature comes from the "All the world's a stage" monologue from As You Like It:

A political cartoon by illustrator S.D. Ehrhart in an 1894 Puck magazine shows a farm woman labeled "Democratic Party" sheltering from a tornado of political change.

All the world's a stage,
And all the men and women merely players;
They have their exits and their entrances
And one man in his time plays many parts,
His Acts being seven ages. At first, the infant...
William Shakespeare, As You Like It, 2/7[3]

This quotation expresses a metaphor because the world is not literally a stage, and most humans are not literally actors and actresses playing roles. By asserting that the world is a stage, Shakespeare uses points of comparison between the world and a stage to convey an understanding about the mechanics of the world and the behavior of the people within it.

In the ancient Hebrew psalms (around 1000 B.C.), one finds already vivid and poetic examples of metaphor such as, "The Lord is my rock, my fortress and my deliverer; my God is my rock, in whom I take refuge, my shield and the horn of my salvation, my stronghold” and “The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want”. Some recent linguistic theories view all language in essence as metaphorical.[4]

The word metaphor itself is a metaphor, coming from a Greek term meaning "transference (of ownership)". The user of a metaphor alters the reference of the word, "carrying" it from one semantic "realm" to another. The new meaning of the word might be derived from an analogy between the two semantic realms, but also from other reasons such as the distortion of the semantic realm - for example in sarcasm.

Etymology

The English word metaphor derives from the 16th-century Old French word métaphore, which comes from the Latin metaphora, "carrying over", and in turn from the Greek μεταφορά (metaphorá), "transference (of ownership)",[5] from μεταφέρω (metapherō), "to carry over", "to transfer"[6] and that from μετά (meta), "behind", "along with", "across"[7] + φέρω (pherō), "to bear", "to carry".[8]

Parts of a metaphor

The Philosophy of Rhetoric (1937) by rhetorician I. A. Richards describes a metaphor as having two parts: the tenor and the vehicle. The tenor is the subject to which attributes are ascribed. The vehicle is the object whose attributes are borrowed. In the previous example, "the world" is compared to a stage, describing it with the attributes of "the stage"; "the world" is the tenor, and "a stage" is the vehicle; "men and women" is the secondary tenor, and "players" is the secondary vehicle.

Other writers[which?] employ the general terms 'ground' and 'figure' to denote the tenor and the vehicle. Cognitive linguistics uses the terms 'target' and 'source', respectively.

Psychologist Julian Jaynes coined the terms 'metaphrand' and 'metaphier', plus two new concepts, 'paraphrand' and 'paraphier'.[9][10] 'Metaphrand' is equivalent to the metaphor-theory terms 'tenor', 'target', and 'ground'. 'Metaphier' is equivalent to the metaphor-theory terms 'vehicle', 'figure', and 'source'. In a simple metaphor, an obvious attribute of the metaphier exactly characterizes the metaphrand (e.g. the ship plowed the seas). With an inexact metaphor, however, a metaphier might have associated attributes or nuances – its paraphiers – that enrich the metaphor because they "project back" to the metaphrand, potentially creating new ideas – the paraphrands – associated thereafter with the metaphrand or even leading to a new metaphor. For example, in the metaphor "Pat is a tornado", the metaphrand is "Pat", the metaphier is "tornado". As metaphier, "tornado" carries paraphiers such as power, storm and wind, counterclockwise motion, and danger, threat, destruction, etc. The metaphoric meaning of "tornado" is inexact: one might understand that 'Pat is powerfully destructive' through the paraphrand of physical and emotional destruction; another person might understand the metaphor as 'Pat can spin out of control'. In the latter case, the paraphier of 'spinning motion' has become the paraphrand 'psychological spin', suggesting an entirely new metaphor for emotional unpredictability, a possibly apt description for a human being hardly applicable to a tornado. Based on his analysis, Jaynes claims that metaphors not only enhance description, but "increase enormously our powers of perception...and our understanding of [the world], and literally create new objects".[9]: 50 

As a type of comparison

Metaphors are most frequently compared with similes. It is said, for instance, that a metaphor is 'a condensed analogy' or 'analogical fusion' or that they 'operate in a similar fashion' or are 'based on the same mental process' or yet that 'the basic processes of analogy are at work in metaphor'. It is also pointed out that 'a border between metaphor and analogy is fuzzy' and 'the difference between them might be described (metaphorically) as the distance between things being compared'. A metaphor asserts the objects in the comparison are identical on the point of comparison, while a simile merely asserts a similarity through use of words such as "like" or "as". For this reason a common-type metaphor is generally considered more forceful than a simile.[11][12]

The metaphor category contains these specialized types:

  • Allegory: An extended metaphor wherein a story illustrates an important attribute of the subject.
  • Antithesis: A rhetorical contrast of ideas by means of parallel arrangements of words, clauses, or sentences.[13]
  • Catachresis: A mixed metaphor, sometimes used by design and sometimes by accident (a rhetorical fault).
  • Hyperbole: Excessive exaggeration to illustrate a point.[14]
  • Parable: An extended metaphor told as an anecdote to illustrate or teach a moral or spiritual lesson, such as in Aesop's fables or Jesus' teaching method as told in the Bible.
  • Pun: A verbal device by which multiple definitions of a word or its homophones are used to give a sentence multiple valid readings, typically to humorous effect.
  • Similitude: An extended simile or metaphor that has a picture part (Bildhälfte), a reality part (Sachhälfte), and a point of comparison (tertium comparationis).[15] Similitudes are found in the parables of Jesus.

Metaphor vs metonymy

Metaphor is distinct from metonymy, both constituting two fundamental modes of thought. Metaphor works by bringing together concepts from different conceptual domains, whereas metonymy uses one element from a given domain to refer to another closely related element. A metaphor creates new links between otherwise distinct conceptual domains, whereas a metonymy relies on pre-existent links within them.

For example, in the phrase "lands belonging to the crown", the word "crown" is a metonymy because some monarchs do indeed wear a crown, physically. In other words, there is a pre-existent link between "crown" and "monarchy".[16] On the other hand, when Ghil'ad Zuckermann argues that the Israeli language is a "phoenicuckoo cross with some magpie characteristics", he is using a metaphor.[17]: 4  There is no physical link between a language and a bird. The reason the metaphors "phoenix" and "cuckoo" are used is that on the one hand hybridic "Israeli" is based on Hebrew, which, like a phoenix, rises from the ashes; and on the other hand, hybridic "Israeli" is based on Yiddish, which like a cuckoo, lays its egg in the nest of another bird, tricking it to believe that it is its own egg. Furthermore, the metaphor "magpie" is employed because, according to Zuckermann, hybridic "Israeli" displays the characteristics of a magpie, "stealing" from languages such as Arabic and English.[17]: 4–6 

Subtypes

A dead metaphor is a metaphor in which the sense of a transferred image has become absent. The phrases "to grasp a concept" and "to gather what you've understood" use physical action as a metaphor for understanding. The audience does not need to visualize the action; dead metaphors normally go unnoticed. Some distinguish between a dead metaphor and a cliché. Others use "dead metaphor" to denote both.[18]

A mixed metaphor is a metaphor that leaps from one identification to a second inconsistent with the first, e.g.:

I smell a rat [...] but I'll nip him in the bud" — Irish politician Boyle Roche

This form is often used as a parody of metaphor itself:

If we can hit that bull's-eye then the rest of the dominoes will fall like a house of cards... Checkmate.

— Futurama character Zapp Brannigan.[19]

An extended metaphor, or conceit, sets up a principal subject with several subsidiary subjects or comparisons. In the above quote from As You Like It, the world is first described as a stage and then the subsidiary subjects men and women are further described in the same context.

An implicit metaphor has no specified tenor, although the vehicle is present. M. H. Abrams offers the following as an example of an implicit metaphor: "That reed was too frail to survive the storm of its sorrows". The reed is the vehicle for the implicit tenor, someone's death, and the "storm" is the vehicle for the person's "sorrows".[20]

Metaphor can serve as a device for persuading an audience of the user's argument or thesis, the so-called rhetorical metaphor.

In rhetoric and literature

Aristotle writes in his work the Rhetoric that metaphors make learning pleasant: "To learn easily is naturally pleasant to all people, and words signify something, so whatever words create knowledge in us are the pleasantest."[21] When discussing Aristotle's Rhetoric, Jan Garret stated "metaphor most brings about learning; for when [Homer] calls old age "stubble", he creates understanding and knowledge through the genus, since both old age and stubble are [species of the genus of] things that have lost their bloom."[22] Metaphors, according to Aristotle, have "qualities of the exotic and the fascinating; but at the same time we recognize that strangers do not have the same rights as our fellow citizens".[23]

Educational psychologist Andrew Ortony gives more explicit detail: "Metaphors are necessary as a communicative device because they allow the transfer of coherent chunks of characteristics -- perceptual, cognitive, emotional and experiential -- from a vehicle which is known to a topic which is less so. In so doing they circumvent the problem of specifying one by one each of the often unnameable and innumerable characteristics; they avoid discretizing the perceived continuity of experience and are thus closer to experience and consequently more vivid and memorable."[24]

As style in speech and writing

As a characteristic of speech and writing, metaphors can serve the poetic imagination. This allows Sylvia Plath, in her poem "Cut", to compare the blood issuing from her cut thumb to the running of a million soldiers, "redcoats, every one"; and enabling Robert Frost, in "The Road Not Taken", to compare a life to a journey.[25][26][27]

Metaphors can be implied and extended throughout pieces of literature.

Larger applications

Sonja K. Foss characterizes metaphors as "nonliteral comparisons in which a word or phrase from one domain of experience is applied to another domain".[28] She argues that since reality is mediated by the language we use to describe it, the metaphors we use shape the world and our interactions to it.

 
A metaphorical visualization of the word anger.

The term metaphor is used to describe more basic or general aspects of experience and cognition:

  • A cognitive metaphor is the association of object to an experience outside the object's environment
  • A conceptual metaphor is an underlying association that is systematic in both language and thought
  • A root metaphor is the underlying worldview that shapes an individual's understanding of a situation
  • A nonlinguistic metaphor is an association between two nonlinguistic realms of experience
  • A visual metaphor uses an image to create the link between different ideas

Conceptual metaphors

Some theorists have suggested that metaphors are not merely stylistic, but that they are cognitively important as well. In Metaphors We Live By, George Lakoff and Mark Johnson argue that metaphors are pervasive in everyday life, not just in language, but also in thought and action. A common definition of metaphor can be described as a comparison that shows how two things that are not alike in most ways are similar in another important way. They explain how a metaphor is simply understanding and experiencing one kind of thing in terms of another, called a "conduit metaphor". A speaker can put ideas or objects into containers, and then send them along a conduit to a listener who removes the object from the container to make meaning of it. Thus, communication is something that ideas go into, and the container is separate from the ideas themselves. Lakoff and Johnson give several examples of daily metaphors in use, including "argument is war" and "time is money". Metaphors are widely used in context to describe personal meaning. The authors suggest that communication can be viewed as a machine: "Communication is not what one does with the machine, but is the machine itself."[29]

Experimental evidence shows that "priming" people with material from one area will influence how they perform tasks and interpret language in a metaphorically related area.[note 1]

As a foundation of our conceptual system

Cognitive linguists emphasize that metaphors serve to facilitate the understanding of one conceptual domain—typically an abstraction such as "life", "theories" or "ideas"—through expressions that relate to another, more familiar conceptual domain—typically more concrete, such as "journey", "buildings" or "food".[31][32] For example: we devour a book of raw facts, try to digest them, stew over them, let them simmer on the back-burner, regurgitate them in discussions, and cook up explanations, hoping they do not seem half-baked.

A convenient short-hand way of capturing this view of metaphor is the following: CONCEPTUAL DOMAIN (A) IS CONCEPTUAL DOMAIN (B), which is what is called a conceptual metaphor. A conceptual metaphor consists of two conceptual domains, in which one domain is understood in terms of another. A conceptual domain is any coherent organization of experience. For example, we have coherently organized knowledge about journeys that we rely on in understanding life.[32]

Lakoff and Johnson greatly contributed to establishing the importance of conceptual metaphor as a framework for thinking in language, leading scholars to investigate the original ways in which writers used novel metaphors and question the fundamental frameworks of thinking in conceptual metaphors.

From a sociological, cultural, or philosophical perspective, one asks to what extent ideologies maintain and impose conceptual patterns of thought by introducing, supporting, and adapting fundamental patterns of thinking metaphorically.[33] To what extent does the ideology fashion and refashion the idea of the nation as a container with borders? How are enemies and outsiders represented? As diseases? As attackers? How are the metaphoric paths of fate, destiny, history, and progress represented? As the opening of an eternal monumental moment (German fascism)? Or as the path to communism (in Russian or Czech for example)?[citation needed]

Some cognitive scholars have attempted to take on board the idea that different languages have evolved radically different concepts and conceptual metaphors, while others hold to the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis. German philologist Wilhelm von Humboldt contributed significantly to this debate on the relationship between culture, language, and linguistic communities. Humboldt remains, however, relatively unknown in English-speaking nations. Andrew Goatly, in "Washing the Brain", takes on board the dual problem of conceptual metaphor as a framework implicit in the language as a system and the way individuals and ideologies negotiate conceptual metaphors. Neural biological research suggests some metaphors are innate, as demonstrated by reduced metaphorical understanding in psychopathy.[34]

James W. Underhill, in Creating Worldviews: Ideology, Metaphor & Language (Edinburgh UP), considers the way individual speech adopts and reinforces certain metaphoric paradigms. This involves a critique of both communist and fascist discourse. Underhill's studies are situated in Czech and German, which allows him to demonstrate the ways individuals are thinking both within and resisting the modes by which ideologies seek to appropriate key concepts such as "the people", "the state", "history", and "struggle".

Though metaphors can be considered to be "in" language, Underhill's chapter on French, English and ethnolinguistics demonstrates that we cannot conceive of language or languages in anything other than metaphoric terms.

Nonlinguistic metaphors

 
Tombstone of a Jewish woman depicting broken candles, a visual metaphor of the end of life.

Metaphors can map experience between two nonlinguistic realms. Musicologist Leonard B. Meyer demonstrated how purely rhythmic and harmonic events can express human emotions.[35] It is an open question whether synesthesia experiences are a sensory version of metaphor, the "source" domain being the presented stimulus, such as a musical tone, and the target domain, being the experience in another modality, such as color.[36]

Art theorist Robert Vischer argued that when we look at a painting, we "feel ourselves into it" by imagining our body in the posture of a nonhuman or inanimate object in the painting. For example, the painting The Lonely Tree by Caspar David Friedrich shows a tree with contorted, barren limbs.[37][38] Looking at the painting, we imagine our limbs in a similarly contorted and barren shape, evoking a feeling of strain and distress. Nonlinguistic metaphors may be the foundation of our experience of visual and musical art, as well as dance and other art forms.[39][40]

In historical linguistics

In historical onomasiology or in historical linguistics, a metaphor is defined as a semantic change based on a similarity in form or function between the original concept and the target concept named by a word.[41]

For example, mouse: small, gray rodent with a long tailsmall, gray computer device with a long cord.

Some recent linguistic theories view all language in essence as metaphorical.[42]

Historical theories

Aristotle discusses the creation of metaphors at the end of his Poetics: "But the greatest thing by far is to be a master of metaphor. It is the one thing that cannot be learnt from others; and it is also a sign of genius, since a good metaphor implies an intuitive perception of the similarity in dissimilars."[43]

Baroque literary theorist Emanuele Tesauro defines the metaphor "the most witty and acute, the most strange and marvelous, the most pleasant and useful, the most eloquent and fecund part of the human intellect". There is, he suggests, something divine in metaphor: the world itself is God's poem[44] and metaphor is not just a literary or rhetorical figure but an analytic tool that can penetrate the mysteries of God and His creation.[45]

Friedrich Nietzsche makes metaphor the conceptual center of his early theory of society in On Truth and Lies in the Non-Moral Sense.[46] Some sociologists have found his essay useful for thinking about metaphors used in society and for reflecting on their own use of metaphor. Sociologists of religion note the importance of metaphor in religious worldviews, and that it is impossible to think sociologically about religion without metaphor.[47]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "In sum, there are now numerous results from comprehension-oriented studies suggesting that (1) comprehending metaphorical language activates concrete source domain concepts, and that (2) activating particular concrete perceptual or motor knowledge affects subsequent reasoning and language comprehension about a metaphorically connected abstract domain"[30]

References

Citations

  1. ^ Compare: "Definition of METAPHOR". www.merriam-webster.com. Retrieved 29 March 2016. [...] a figure of speech in which a word or phrase literally denoting one kind of object or idea is used in place of another to suggest a likeness or analogy between them [... .]
  2. ^ The Oxford Companion to The English Language, 2nd Edition (e-book). Oxford University Press. 2018. ISBN 978-0-19-107387-8.
  3. ^ "As You Like It: Entire Play". Shakespeare.mit.edu. Retrieved 4 March 2012.
  4. ^ "Radio 4 – Reith Lectures 2003 – The Emerging Mind". BBC. Retrieved 4 March 2012.
  5. ^ μεταφορά 6 July 2007 at the Wayback Machine, Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, on Perseus.
  6. ^ cdasc3D%2367010 μεταφέρω, Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, on Perseus.
  7. ^ μετά 29 March 2008 at the Wayback Machine, Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, on Perseus.
  8. ^ φέρω 12 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine, Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, on Perseus.
  9. ^ a b Jaynes, Julian (2000) [1976]. (PDF). Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 0-618-05707-2. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 August 2019. Retrieved 24 October 2019.
  10. ^ Pierce, Dann L. (2003). "Chapter Five". Rhetorical Criticism and Theory in Practice. McGraw-Hill. ISBN 9780072500875.
  11. ^ The Oxford Companion to the English Language (1992) pp.653
  12. ^ The Columbia Encyclopedia (6th edition)
  13. ^ "Definition of ANTITHESIS".
  14. ^ "Definition of HYPERBOLE".
  15. ^ Adolf Jülicher, Die Gleichnisreden Jesu, 2nd ed (Tübingen: J. C. B. Mohr, 1910).
  16. ^ "Definition of METONYMY".
  17. ^ a b Zuckermann, Ghil'ad (2020). Revivalistics: From the Genesis of Israeli to Language Reclamation in Australia and Beyond. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199812790.
  18. ^ Barker, P. (2000). "Working with the metaphor of life and death". Medical Humanities. 26 (2): 97–102. doi:10.1136/mh.26.2.97. PMID 23670145. S2CID 25309973. from the original on 2 February 2019. Retrieved 1 February 2019.
  19. ^ "Zapp Brannigan (Character)". IMDb. Retrieved 21 September 2014.
  20. ^ M. H. Abrams and Geoffrey Galt Harpham, A Glossary of Literary Terms, 11th ed. (Stamford, CT: Cengage Learning, 2015), 134.
  21. ^ Aristotle, W. Rhys Roberts, Ingram Bywater, and Friedrich Solmsen. Rhetoric. New York: Modern Library, 1954. Print.
  22. ^ Garret, Jan. "Aristotle on Metaphor." , Excerpts from Poetics and Rhetoric. N.p., 28 March 2007. Web. 29 Sept. 2014.
  23. ^ Moran, Richard. 1996. Artifice and persuasion: The work of metaphor in the rhetoric. In Essays on Aristotle's rhetoric, ed. Amelie Oksenberg Rorty, 385–398. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  24. ^ Ortony, Andrew (Winter 1975). "Why metaphors are necessary and not just nice". Educational Theory. 25 (1): 45–53. doi:10.1111/j.1741-5446.1975.tb00666.x.
  25. ^ "Cut". Sylvia Plath Forum. Retrieved 4 March 2012.
  26. ^ . www.sylviaplathforum.com. Archived from the original on 12 September 2010.
  27. ^ "1. The Road Not Taken. Frost, Robert. 1920. Mountain Interval". Bartleby.com. Retrieved 4 March 2012.
  28. ^ Foss, Sonja K. (1988). Rhetorical Criticism: Exploration and Practice (4 ed.). Long Grove, Illinois: Waveland Press (published 2009). p. 249. ISBN 9781577665861. Retrieved 4 October 2018.
  29. ^ Lakoff, G. & Johnson, M. Metaphors We Live By (IL: University of Chicago Press, 1980), Chapters 1–3. (pp. 3–13).
  30. ^ Sato, Manami; Schafer, Amy J.; Bergen, Benjamin K. (2015). "Metaphor priming in sentence production: Concrete pictures affect abstract language production". Acta Psychologica. 156: 136–142. doi:10.1016/j.actpsy.2014.09.010. ISSN 0001-6918. PMID 25443987.
  31. ^ Lakoff G.; Johnson M. (2003) [1980]. Metaphors We Live By. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-46801-3.
  32. ^ a b Zoltán Kövecses. (2002) Metaphor: a practical introduction. Oxford University Press US. ISBN 978-0-19-514511-3.
  33. ^ McKinnon, AM. (2013). 'Ideology and the Market Metaphor in Rational Choice Theory of Religion: A Rhetorical Critique of "Religious Economies"'. Critical Sociology, vol 39, no. 4, pp. 529-543.[1] 12 November 2014 at the Wayback Machine
  34. ^ Meier, Brian P.; et al. (September 2007). "Failing to take the moral high ground: Psychopathy and the vertical representation of morality". Personality and Individual Differences. 43 (4): 757–767. doi:10.1016/j.paid.2007.02.001. Retrieved 1 November 2016.
  35. ^ Meyer, L. (1956) Emotion and Meaning in Music. Chicago: University of Chicago Press
  36. ^ Blechner, M. (2018) The Mindbrain and Dreams: An Exploration of Dreaming, Thinking, and Artistic Creation. NY: Routledge
  37. ^ Blechner, M. (1988) Differentiating empathy from therapeutic action. Contemporary Psychoanalysis, 24:301–310.
  38. ^ Vischer, R. (1873) Über das optische Formgefühl: Ein Beitrag zur Aesthetik. Leipzig: Hermann Credner. For an English translation of selections, see Wind, E. (1963) Art and Anarchy. London: Faber and Faber.
  39. ^ Johnson, M. & Larson, S. (2003) "Something in the way she moves" – Metaphors of musical motion. Metaphor and Symbol, 18:63–84
  40. ^ Whittock, T. (1992) The role of metaphor in dance. British Journal of Aesthetics, 32:242–249.
  41. ^ Cf. Joachim Grzega (2004), Bezeichnungswandel: Wie, Warum, Wozu? Ein Beitrag zur englischen und allgemeinen Onomasiologie, Heidelberg: Winter, and Blank, Andreas (1997), Prinzipien des lexikalischen Bedeutungswandels am Beispiel der romanischen Sprachen, Tübingen: Niemeyer.
  42. ^ "Radio 4 – Reith Lectures 2003 – The Emerging Mind". BBC. Retrieved 4 March 2012.
  43. ^ Cf. The Rhetoric and Poetics of Aristotle, ed. Friedrich Solmsen (New York: Random House, 1954), 1459a 5–8.
  44. ^ Cassell Dictionary Italian Literature. Bloomsbury Academic. 1996. p. 578. ISBN 9780304704644.
  45. ^ Sohm, Philip (1991). Pittoresco. Marco Boschini, His Critics, and Their Critiques of Painterly Brushwork in Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-Century Italy. Cambridge University Press. p. 126. ISBN 9780521382564.
  46. ^ "T he Nietzsche Channel: On Truth and Lie in an Extra-Moral Sense". oregonstate.edu.
  47. ^ McKinnon, A. M. (2012). "Metaphors in and for the Sociology of Religion: Towards a Theory after Nietzsche" (PDF). Journal of Contemporary Religion. pp. 203–216.

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External links

  • History of metaphor on In Our Time at the BBC
  • Audio illustrations of metaphor as figure of speech
  • Top Ten Metaphors of 2008
  • Shakespeare's Metaphors
  • Definition and Examples
  • Metaphor Examples (categorized)
  • List of ancient Greek words starting with μετα-, on Perseus
  • Metaphor and Phenomenology article in the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy
  • Metaphors algebra
  • Pérez-Sobrino, Paula (2014). "Meaning construction in verbomusical environments: Conceptual disintegration and metonymy" (PDF). Journal of Pragmatics. 70: 130–151. doi:10.1016/j.pragma.2014.06.008.

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This article is about the figure of speech For other uses see Metaphor disambiguation A metaphor is a figure of speech that for rhetorical effect directly refers to one thing by mentioning another 1 It may provide or obscure clarity or identify hidden similarities between two different ideas Metaphors are often compared with other types of figurative language such as antithesis hyperbole metonymy and simile 2 One of the most commonly cited examples of a metaphor in English literature comes from the All the world s a stage monologue from As You Like It A political cartoon by illustrator S D Ehrhart in an 1894 Puck magazine shows a farm woman labeled Democratic Party sheltering from a tornado of political change All the world s a stage And all the men and women merely players They have their exits and their entrances And one man in his time plays many parts His Acts being seven ages At first the infant William Shakespeare As You Like It 2 7 3 This quotation expresses a metaphor because the world is not literally a stage and most humans are not literally actors and actresses playing roles By asserting that the world is a stage Shakespeare uses points of comparison between the world and a stage to convey an understanding about the mechanics of the world and the behavior of the people within it In the ancient Hebrew psalms around 1000 B C one finds already vivid and poetic examples of metaphor such as The Lord is my rock my fortress and my deliverer my God is my rock in whom I take refuge my shield and the horn of my salvation my stronghold and The Lord is my shepherd I shall not want Some recent linguistic theories view all language in essence as metaphorical 4 The word metaphor itself is a metaphor coming from a Greek term meaning transference of ownership The user of a metaphor alters the reference of the word carrying it from one semantic realm to another The new meaning of the word might be derived from an analogy between the two semantic realms but also from other reasons such as the distortion of the semantic realm for example in sarcasm Contents 1 Etymology 2 Parts of a metaphor 3 As a type of comparison 3 1 Metaphor vs metonymy 3 2 Subtypes 4 In rhetoric and literature 4 1 As style in speech and writing 5 Larger applications 5 1 Conceptual metaphors 5 2 As a foundation of our conceptual system 5 3 Nonlinguistic metaphors 6 In historical linguistics 7 Historical theories 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 10 1 Citations 10 2 Sources 11 External linksEtymology EditThe English word metaphor derives from the 16th century Old French word metaphore which comes from the Latin metaphora carrying over and in turn from the Greek metafora metaphora transference of ownership 5 from metaferw metapherō to carry over to transfer 6 and that from meta meta behind along with across 7 ferw pherō to bear to carry 8 Parts of a metaphor EditThe Philosophy of Rhetoric 1937 by rhetorician I A Richards describes a metaphor as having two parts the tenor and the vehicle The tenor is the subject to which attributes are ascribed The vehicle is the object whose attributes are borrowed In the previous example the world is compared to a stage describing it with the attributes of the stage the world is the tenor and a stage is the vehicle men and women is the secondary tenor and players is the secondary vehicle Other writers which employ the general terms ground and figure to denote the tenor and the vehicle Cognitive linguistics uses the terms target and source respectively Psychologist Julian Jaynes coined the terms metaphrand and metaphier plus two new concepts paraphrand and paraphier 9 10 Metaphrand is equivalent to the metaphor theory terms tenor target and ground Metaphier is equivalent to the metaphor theory terms vehicle figure and source In a simple metaphor an obvious attribute of the metaphier exactly characterizes the metaphrand e g the ship plowed the seas With an inexact metaphor however a metaphier might have associated attributes or nuances its paraphiers that enrich the metaphor because they project back to the metaphrand potentially creating new ideas the paraphrands associated thereafter with the metaphrand or even leading to a new metaphor For example in the metaphor Pat is a tornado the metaphrand is Pat the metaphier is tornado As metaphier tornado carries paraphiers such as power storm and wind counterclockwise motion and danger threat destruction etc The metaphoric meaning of tornado is inexact one might understand that Pat is powerfully destructive through the paraphrand of physical and emotional destruction another person might understand the metaphor as Pat can spin out of control In the latter case the paraphier of spinning motion has become the paraphrand psychological spin suggesting an entirely new metaphor for emotional unpredictability a possibly apt description for a human being hardly applicable to a tornado Based on his analysis Jaynes claims that metaphors not only enhance description but increase enormously our powers of perception and our understanding of the world and literally create new objects 9 50 As a type of comparison EditMetaphors are most frequently compared with similes It is said for instance that a metaphor is a condensed analogy or analogical fusion or that they operate in a similar fashion or are based on the same mental process or yet that the basic processes of analogy are at work in metaphor It is also pointed out that a border between metaphor and analogy is fuzzy and the difference between them might be described metaphorically as the distance between things being compared A metaphor asserts the objects in the comparison are identical on the point of comparison while a simile merely asserts a similarity through use of words such as like or as For this reason a common type metaphor is generally considered more forceful than a simile 11 12 The metaphor category contains these specialized types Allegory An extended metaphor wherein a story illustrates an important attribute of the subject Antithesis A rhetorical contrast of ideas by means of parallel arrangements of words clauses or sentences 13 Catachresis A mixed metaphor sometimes used by design and sometimes by accident a rhetorical fault Hyperbole Excessive exaggeration to illustrate a point 14 Parable An extended metaphor told as an anecdote to illustrate or teach a moral or spiritual lesson such as in Aesop s fables or Jesus teaching method as told in the Bible Pun A verbal device by which multiple definitions of a word or its homophones are used to give a sentence multiple valid readings typically to humorous effect Similitude An extended simile or metaphor that has a picture part Bildhalfte a reality part Sachhalfte and a point of comparison tertium comparationis 15 Similitudes are found in the parables of Jesus Metaphor vs metonymy Edit Main article Metaphor and metonymy Metaphor is distinct from metonymy both constituting two fundamental modes of thought Metaphor works by bringing together concepts from different conceptual domains whereas metonymy uses one element from a given domain to refer to another closely related element A metaphor creates new links between otherwise distinct conceptual domains whereas a metonymy relies on pre existent links within them For example in the phrase lands belonging to the crown the word crown is a metonymy because some monarchs do indeed wear a crown physically In other words there is a pre existent link between crown and monarchy 16 On the other hand when Ghil ad Zuckermann argues that the Israeli language is a phoenicuckoo cross with some magpie characteristics he is using a metaphor 17 4 There is no physical link between a language and a bird The reason the metaphors phoenix and cuckoo are used is that on the one hand hybridic Israeli is based on Hebrew which like a phoenix rises from the ashes and on the other hand hybridic Israeli is based on Yiddish which like a cuckoo lays its egg in the nest of another bird tricking it to believe that it is its own egg Furthermore the metaphor magpie is employed because according to Zuckermann hybridic Israeli displays the characteristics of a magpie stealing from languages such as Arabic and English 17 4 6 Subtypes Edit A dead metaphor is a metaphor in which the sense of a transferred image has become absent The phrases to grasp a concept and to gather what you ve understood use physical action as a metaphor for understanding The audience does not need to visualize the action dead metaphors normally go unnoticed Some distinguish between a dead metaphor and a cliche Others use dead metaphor to denote both 18 A mixed metaphor is a metaphor that leaps from one identification to a second inconsistent with the first e g I smell a rat but I ll nip him in the bud Irish politician Boyle Roche This form is often used as a parody of metaphor itself If we can hit that bull s eye then the rest of the dominoes will fall like a house of cards Checkmate Futurama character Zapp Brannigan 19 An extended metaphor or conceit sets up a principal subject with several subsidiary subjects or comparisons In the above quote from As You Like It the world is first described as a stage and then the subsidiary subjects men and women are further described in the same context An implicit metaphor has no specified tenor although the vehicle is present M H Abrams offers the following as an example of an implicit metaphor That reed was too frail to survive the storm of its sorrows The reed is the vehicle for the implicit tenor someone s death and the storm is the vehicle for the person s sorrows 20 Metaphor can serve as a device for persuading an audience of the user s argument or thesis the so called rhetorical metaphor In rhetoric and literature EditAristotle writes in his work the Rhetoric that metaphors make learning pleasant To learn easily is naturally pleasant to all people and words signify something so whatever words create knowledge in us are the pleasantest 21 When discussing Aristotle s Rhetoric Jan Garret stated metaphor most brings about learning for when Homer calls old age stubble he creates understanding and knowledge through the genus since both old age and stubble are species of the genus of things that have lost their bloom 22 Metaphors according to Aristotle have qualities of the exotic and the fascinating but at the same time we recognize that strangers do not have the same rights as our fellow citizens 23 Educational psychologist Andrew Ortony gives more explicit detail Metaphors are necessary as a communicative device because they allow the transfer of coherent chunks of characteristics perceptual cognitive emotional and experiential from a vehicle which is known to a topic which is less so In so doing they circumvent the problem of specifying one by one each of the often unnameable and innumerable characteristics they avoid discretizing the perceived continuity of experience and are thus closer to experience and consequently more vivid and memorable 24 As style in speech and writing Edit As a characteristic of speech and writing metaphors can serve the poetic imagination This allows Sylvia Plath in her poem Cut to compare the blood issuing from her cut thumb to the running of a million soldiers redcoats every one and enabling Robert Frost in The Road Not Taken to compare a life to a journey 25 26 27 Metaphors can be implied and extended throughout pieces of literature Larger applications EditSonja K Foss characterizes metaphors as nonliteral comparisons in which a word or phrase from one domain of experience is applied to another domain 28 She argues that since reality is mediated by the language we use to describe it the metaphors we use shape the world and our interactions to it A metaphorical visualization of the word anger The term metaphor is used to describe more basic or general aspects of experience and cognition A cognitive metaphor is the association of object to an experience outside the object s environment A conceptual metaphor is an underlying association that is systematic in both language and thought A root metaphor is the underlying worldview that shapes an individual s understanding of a situation A nonlinguistic metaphor is an association between two nonlinguistic realms of experience A visual metaphor uses an image to create the link between different ideasConceptual metaphors Edit Main article Conceptual metaphor Some theorists have suggested that metaphors are not merely stylistic but that they are cognitively important as well In Metaphors We Live By George Lakoff and Mark Johnson argue that metaphors are pervasive in everyday life not just in language but also in thought and action A common definition of metaphor can be described as a comparison that shows how two things that are not alike in most ways are similar in another important way They explain how a metaphor is simply understanding and experiencing one kind of thing in terms of another called a conduit metaphor A speaker can put ideas or objects into containers and then send them along a conduit to a listener who removes the object from the container to make meaning of it Thus communication is something that ideas go into and the container is separate from the ideas themselves Lakoff and Johnson give several examples of daily metaphors in use including argument is war and time is money Metaphors are widely used in context to describe personal meaning The authors suggest that communication can be viewed as a machine Communication is not what one does with the machine but is the machine itself 29 Experimental evidence shows that priming people with material from one area will influence how they perform tasks and interpret language in a metaphorically related area note 1 As a foundation of our conceptual system Edit Cognitive linguists emphasize that metaphors serve to facilitate the understanding of one conceptual domain typically an abstraction such as life theories or ideas through expressions that relate to another more familiar conceptual domain typically more concrete such as journey buildings or food 31 32 For example we devour a book of raw facts try to digest them stew over them let them simmer on the back burner regurgitate them in discussions and cook up explanations hoping they do not seem half baked A convenient short hand way of capturing this view of metaphor is the following CONCEPTUAL DOMAIN A IS CONCEPTUAL DOMAIN B which is what is called a conceptual metaphor A conceptual metaphor consists of two conceptual domains in which one domain is understood in terms of another A conceptual domain is any coherent organization of experience For example we have coherently organized knowledge about journeys that we rely on in understanding life 32 Lakoff and Johnson greatly contributed to establishing the importance of conceptual metaphor as a framework for thinking in language leading scholars to investigate the original ways in which writers used novel metaphors and question the fundamental frameworks of thinking in conceptual metaphors From a sociological cultural or philosophical perspective one asks to what extent ideologies maintain and impose conceptual patterns of thought by introducing supporting and adapting fundamental patterns of thinking metaphorically 33 To what extent does the ideology fashion and refashion the idea of the nation as a container with borders How are enemies and outsiders represented As diseases As attackers How are the metaphoric paths of fate destiny history and progress represented As the opening of an eternal monumental moment German fascism Or as the path to communism in Russian or Czech for example citation needed Some cognitive scholars have attempted to take on board the idea that different languages have evolved radically different concepts and conceptual metaphors while others hold to the Sapir Whorf hypothesis German philologist Wilhelm von Humboldt contributed significantly to this debate on the relationship between culture language and linguistic communities Humboldt remains however relatively unknown in English speaking nations Andrew Goatly in Washing the Brain takes on board the dual problem of conceptual metaphor as a framework implicit in the language as a system and the way individuals and ideologies negotiate conceptual metaphors Neural biological research suggests some metaphors are innate as demonstrated by reduced metaphorical understanding in psychopathy 34 James W Underhill in Creating Worldviews Ideology Metaphor amp Language Edinburgh UP considers the way individual speech adopts and reinforces certain metaphoric paradigms This involves a critique of both communist and fascist discourse Underhill s studies are situated in Czech and German which allows him to demonstrate the ways individuals are thinking both within and resisting the modes by which ideologies seek to appropriate key concepts such as the people the state history and struggle Though metaphors can be considered to be in language Underhill s chapter on French English and ethnolinguistics demonstrates that we cannot conceive of language or languages in anything other than metaphoric terms Nonlinguistic metaphors Edit Tombstone of a Jewish woman depicting broken candles a visual metaphor of the end of life Metaphors can map experience between two nonlinguistic realms Musicologist Leonard B Meyer demonstrated how purely rhythmic and harmonic events can express human emotions 35 It is an open question whether synesthesia experiences are a sensory version of metaphor the source domain being the presented stimulus such as a musical tone and the target domain being the experience in another modality such as color 36 Art theorist Robert Vischer argued that when we look at a painting we feel ourselves into it by imagining our body in the posture of a nonhuman or inanimate object in the painting For example the painting The Lonely Tree by Caspar David Friedrich shows a tree with contorted barren limbs 37 38 Looking at the painting we imagine our limbs in a similarly contorted and barren shape evoking a feeling of strain and distress Nonlinguistic metaphors may be the foundation of our experience of visual and musical art as well as dance and other art forms 39 40 In historical linguistics EditIn historical onomasiology or in historical linguistics a metaphor is defined as a semantic change based on a similarity in form or function between the original concept and the target concept named by a word 41 For example mouse small gray rodent with a long tail small gray computer device with a long cord Some recent linguistic theories view all language in essence as metaphorical 42 Historical theories EditAristotle discusses the creation of metaphors at the end of his Poetics But the greatest thing by far is to be a master of metaphor It is the one thing that cannot be learnt from others and it is also a sign of genius since a good metaphor implies an intuitive perception of the similarity in dissimilars 43 Baroque literary theorist Emanuele Tesauro defines the metaphor the most witty and acute the most strange and marvelous the most pleasant and useful the most eloquent and fecund part of the human intellect There is he suggests something divine in metaphor the world itself is God s poem 44 and metaphor is not just a literary or rhetorical figure but an analytic tool that can penetrate the mysteries of God and His creation 45 Friedrich Nietzsche makes metaphor the conceptual center of his early theory of society in On Truth and Lies in the Non Moral Sense 46 Some sociologists have found his essay useful for thinking about metaphors used in society and for reflecting on their own use of metaphor Sociologists of religion note the importance of metaphor in religious worldviews and that it is impossible to think sociologically about religion without metaphor 47 See also EditAlliteration Camel s nose Colemanballs Conceptual blending Description Experience model Hypocatastasis Ideasthesia List of English language metaphors Literal and figurative language Metaphor identification procedure Metaphor in philosophy Metonymy Misnomer Origin of language Origin of speech Pataphor Personification Reification fallacy Sarcasm Simile Synecdoche Analogy Tertium comparationis War as metaphor World HypothesesNotes Edit In sum there are now numerous results from comprehension oriented studies suggesting that 1 comprehending metaphorical language activates concrete source domain concepts and that 2 activating particular concrete perceptual or motor knowledge affects subsequent reasoning and language comprehension about a metaphorically connected abstract domain 30 References EditCitations Edit Compare Definition of METAPHOR www merriam webster com Retrieved 29 March 2016 a figure of speech in which a word or phrase literally denoting one kind of object or idea is used in place of another to suggest a likeness or analogy between them The Oxford Companion to The English Language 2nd Edition e book Oxford University Press 2018 ISBN 978 0 19 107387 8 As You Like It Entire Play Shakespeare mit edu Retrieved 4 March 2012 Radio 4 Reith Lectures 2003 The Emerging Mind BBC Retrieved 4 March 2012 metafora Archived 6 July 2007 at the Wayback Machine Henry George Liddell Robert Scott A Greek English Lexicon on Perseus cdasc3D 2367010 metaferw Henry George Liddell Robert Scott A Greek English Lexicon on Perseus meta Archived 29 March 2008 at the Wayback Machine Henry George Liddell Robert Scott A Greek English Lexicon on Perseus ferw Archived 12 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine Henry George Liddell Robert Scott A Greek English Lexicon on Perseus a b Jaynes Julian 2000 1976 The Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind PDF Houghton Mifflin ISBN 0 618 05707 2 Archived from the original PDF on 7 August 2019 Retrieved 24 October 2019 Pierce Dann L 2003 Chapter Five Rhetorical Criticism and Theory in Practice McGraw Hill ISBN 9780072500875 The Oxford Companion to the English Language 1992 pp 653 The Columbia Encyclopedia 6th edition Definition of ANTITHESIS Definition of HYPERBOLE Adolf Julicher Die Gleichnisreden Jesu 2nd ed Tubingen J C B Mohr 1910 Definition of METONYMY a b Zuckermann Ghil ad 2020 Revivalistics From the Genesis of Israeli to Language Reclamation in Australia and Beyond New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199812790 Barker P 2000 Working with the metaphor of life and death Medical Humanities 26 2 97 102 doi 10 1136 mh 26 2 97 PMID 23670145 S2CID 25309973 Archived from the original on 2 February 2019 Retrieved 1 February 2019 Zapp Brannigan Character IMDb Retrieved 21 September 2014 M H Abrams and Geoffrey Galt Harpham A Glossary of Literary Terms 11th ed Stamford CT Cengage Learning 2015 134 Aristotle W Rhys Roberts Ingram Bywater and Friedrich Solmsen Rhetoric New York Modern Library 1954 Print Garret Jan Aristotle on Metaphor Excerpts from Poetics and Rhetoric N p 28 March 2007 Web 29 Sept 2014 Moran Richard 1996 Artifice and persuasion The work of metaphor in the rhetoric In Essays on Aristotle s rhetoric ed Amelie Oksenberg Rorty 385 398 Berkeley University of California Press Ortony Andrew Winter 1975 Why metaphors are necessary and not just nice Educational Theory 25 1 45 53 doi 10 1111 j 1741 5446 1975 tb00666 x Cut Sylvia Plath Forum Retrieved 4 March 2012 Sylvia Plath Forum Home page www sylviaplathforum com Archived from the original on 12 September 2010 1 The Road Not Taken Frost Robert 1920 Mountain Interval Bartleby com Retrieved 4 March 2012 Foss Sonja K 1988 Rhetorical Criticism Exploration and Practice 4 ed Long Grove Illinois Waveland Press published 2009 p 249 ISBN 9781577665861 Retrieved 4 October 2018 Lakoff G amp Johnson M Metaphors We Live By IL University of Chicago Press 1980 Chapters 1 3 pp 3 13 Sato Manami Schafer Amy J Bergen Benjamin K 2015 Metaphor priming in sentence production Concrete pictures affect abstract language production Acta Psychologica 156 136 142 doi 10 1016 j actpsy 2014 09 010 ISSN 0001 6918 PMID 25443987 Lakoff G Johnson M 2003 1980 Metaphors We Live By Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 46801 3 a b Zoltan Kovecses 2002 Metaphor a practical introduction Oxford University Press US ISBN 978 0 19 514511 3 McKinnon AM 2013 Ideology and the Market Metaphor in Rational Choice Theory of Religion A Rhetorical Critique of Religious Economies Critical Sociology vol 39 no 4 pp 529 543 1 Archived 12 November 2014 at the Wayback Machine Meier Brian P et al September 2007 Failing to take the moral high ground Psychopathy and the vertical representation of morality Personality and Individual Differences 43 4 757 767 doi 10 1016 j paid 2007 02 001 Retrieved 1 November 2016 Meyer L 1956 Emotion and Meaning in Music Chicago University of Chicago Press Blechner M 2018 The Mindbrain and Dreams An Exploration of Dreaming Thinking and Artistic Creation NY Routledge Blechner M 1988 Differentiating empathy from therapeutic action Contemporary Psychoanalysis 24 301 310 Vischer R 1873 Uber das optische Formgefuhl Ein Beitrag zur Aesthetik Leipzig Hermann Credner For an English translation of selections see Wind E 1963 Art and Anarchy London Faber and Faber Johnson M amp Larson S 2003 Something in the way she moves Metaphors of musical motion Metaphor and Symbol 18 63 84 Whittock T 1992 The role of metaphor in dance British Journal of Aesthetics 32 242 249 Cf Joachim Grzega 2004 Bezeichnungswandel Wie Warum Wozu Ein Beitrag zur englischen und allgemeinen Onomasiologie Heidelberg Winter and Blank Andreas 1997 Prinzipien des lexikalischen Bedeutungswandels am Beispiel der romanischen Sprachen Tubingen Niemeyer Radio 4 Reith Lectures 2003 The Emerging Mind BBC Retrieved 4 March 2012 Cf The Rhetoric and Poetics of Aristotle ed Friedrich Solmsen New York Random House 1954 1459a 5 8 Cassell Dictionary Italian Literature Bloomsbury Academic 1996 p 578 ISBN 9780304704644 Sohm Philip 1991 Pittoresco Marco Boschini His Critics and Their Critiques of Painterly Brushwork in Seventeenth and Eighteenth Century Italy Cambridge University Press p 126 ISBN 9780521382564 T he Nietzsche Channel On Truth and Lie in an Extra Moral Sense oregonstate edu McKinnon A M 2012 Metaphors in and for the Sociology of Religion Towards a Theory after Nietzsche PDF Journal of Contemporary Religion pp 203 216 Sources Edit This article incorporates material from the Citizendium article Metaphor which is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 3 0 Unported License but not under the GFDL Stefano Arduini 2007 ed Metaphors Roma Edizioni di Storia e Letteratura Aristotle Poetics Trans I Bywater In The Complete Works of Aristotle The Revised Oxford Translation 1984 2 Vols Ed Jonathan Barnes Princeton NJ Princeton University Press Max Black 1954 Metaphor Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 55 pp 273 294 Max Black 1962 Models and metaphors Studies in language and philosophy Ithaca Cornell University Press Max Black 1979 More about Metaphor in A Ortony ed Metaphor amp Thought Clive Cazeaux 2007 Metaphor and Continental Philosophy From Kant to Derrida New York NY Routledge L J Cohen 1979 The Semantics of Metaphor in A Ortony ed Metaphor amp Thought Donald Davidson 1978 What Metaphors Mean Reprinted in Inquiries into Truth and Interpretation 1984 Oxford England Oxford University Press Jacques Derrida 1982 White Mythology Metaphor in the Text of Philosophy In Margins of Philosophy Trans Alan Bass Chicago University of Chicago Press Rene Dirvens Ralf Porings eds 2002 Metaphor and Metonymy in Contrast Berlin Mouton de Gruyter Fass Dan 1988 Metonymy and metaphor what s the difference Proceedings of the 12th conference on Computational linguistics Vol 1 pp 177 81 doi 10 3115 991635 991671 ISBN 978 963 8431 56 1 S2CID 9557558 Jakobson Roman 1990 Two Aspects of Language and Two Types of Aphasic Disturbances In Linda Waugh Monique Monville Burston eds On Language Cambridge MA Harvard University Press pp 115 133 ISBN 978 0 674 63536 4 Lakoff G amp Johnson M Metaphors We Live By IL University of Chicago Press 1980 Chapters 1 3 pp 3 13 Lakoff George 1980 Metaphors We Live By Chicago IL The University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 46801 3 Low Graham 11 February 1999 An Essay is a Person In Cameron Lynne Low Graham eds Researching and Applying Metaphor Cambridge England Cambridge University Press pp 221 48 ISBN 978 0 521 64964 3 Peters Wim 2003 Metonymy as a cross lingual phenomenon Proceedings of the ACL 2003 workshop on Lexicon and figurative language Vol 14 pp 1 9 doi 10 3115 1118975 1118976 S2CID 8267864 McKinnon AM 2012 Metaphors in and for the Sociology of Religion Towards a Theory after Nietzsche Journal of Contemporary Religion vol 27 no 2 pp 203 216 2 Archived 18 August 2014 at the Wayback Machine David Punter 2007 Metaphor London Routledge Paul Ricoeur 1975 The Rule of Metaphor Multi Disciplinary Studies in the Creation of Meaning in Language trans Robert Czerny with Kathleen McLaughlin and John Costello S J London Routledge and Kegan Paul 1978 Toronto University of Toronto Press 1977 I A Richards 1936 The Philosophy of Rhetoric Oxford Oxford University Press John Searle 1979 Metaphor in A Ortony ed Metaphor and Thought Cambridge University Press Underhill James W Creating Worldviews Metaphor Ideology amp Language Edinburgh UP 2011 Herscberger Ruth Summer 1943 The Structure of Metaphor The Kenyan Review 5 3 433 443 JSTOR 4332426 Rudmin Floyd W 1991 Having A Brief History of Metaphor and Meaning Syracuse Law Review 42 163 Retrieved 11 October 2013 Somov Georgij Yu 2013 The interrelation of metaphors and metonymies in sign systems of visual art An example analysis of works by V I Surikov Semiotica 2013 193 31 66 doi 10 1515 sem 2013 0003 External links Edit Look up metaphor in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikiquote has quotations related to Metaphors Wikimedia Commons has media related to Metaphors History of metaphor on In Our Time at the BBC A short history of metaphor Audio illustrations of metaphor as figure of speech Top Ten Metaphors of 2008 Shakespeare s Metaphors Definition and Examples Metaphor Examples categorized List of ancient Greek words starting with meta on Perseus Metaphor and Phenomenology article in the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphors algebra Perez Sobrino Paula 2014 Meaning construction in verbomusical environments Conceptual disintegration and metonymy PDF Journal of Pragmatics 70 130 151 doi 10 1016 j pragma 2014 06 008 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Metaphor amp oldid 1148399369, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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