Preparation
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New answer posted
a month agoContributor-Level 10
Here is a list of some of the popular idioms in English:
- Break the ice: To start a conversation in a social setting and make everyone comfortable
- A blessing in disguise: Something that appears bad at first, but turns out to be good
- Hit the sack: To go to sleep
- Spill the beans: To disclose/ reveal a secret
- Under the weather: Feeling unwell
- Once in a blue moon: Something happens extremely rarely
- Kill two birds with one stone: To achieve two things with one action
- When pigs fly: Something that will never happen
- Let the CAT out of the bag: To reveal something accidentally
New answer posted
a month agoContributor-Level 9
Idioms are phrases with a figurative meaning that is understood culturally. Such phrases usually have a very different meaning when compared to their literal definition.
Example of Idiom: "It's raining cats and dogs" means it's raining heavily.
New answer posted
a month agoContributor-Level 9
Here is a list of some good books for synecdoche:
Book | Author/ Publisher |
---|---|
A Glossary of Literary Terms | M.H Abrams & Geoffrey Harpham |
Figures of Speech: 60 Ways to Turn a Phrase | Arthur Quinn |
The Elements of Eloquence | Mark Forsyth |
A Handlist of Rhetorical Terms | Richard A. Lanham |
The Penguin Dictionary of Literary Terms and Literary Theory | J.A Cuddon |
New answer posted
a month agoContributor-Level 10
Difference between Synecdoche and Metonymy:
Figure of Speech | Definition | Example |
---|---|---|
Synecdoche | Used when substituting a part-to-whole or vice-versa relationship.
| The strings played beautifully = Referring to the strings of a musical instrument, such as a guitar. |
Metonyms | Substitution based on association or closeness and not necessarily a part of it. | The kettle is boiling. = The water inside the kettle. |
New answer posted
a month agoContributor-Level 10
Find below a list of 10 examples of synecdoche:
- Silver hair floated across the room. (Referring to older people)
- Steel marched into battle. (Referring to soldiers with weapons)
- Sirius has a good head on his shoulders. (Referring to Sirius's intelligence)
- The sails disappeared into the darkness. (Referring to part of the ship for the whole)
- The benches passed a new law. (Referring to lawmakers/ judges)
- I need more hands on this project. (Multiple people)
- The newsroom is buzzing today after the celebrity's scandal broke out. (Journalists/paparazzi)
- The crown will decide the nation's fate. (Ruler/ Monarch)
- All eyes were fixated on the singer. (Eve
New answer posted
a month agoContributor-Level 10
Synecdoche is used if a part is used to represent the whole thing or the entire thing is used to represent a part.
Examples:
- We need more eyes on this matter.
- I've five mouths to feed.
New answer posted
a month agoContributor-Level 10
Check out the most common types of conversion in English grammar:
- Verb to noun (email – to email)
- Verb to noun (run – a run)
- Adjective to Noun (poor – the poor)
- Preposition to verb (up – to up)
New answer posted
a month agoContributor-Level 10
No exactly. Derivation adds a prefix or suffix to create a new word, such as teach–teacher. While conversion changes the word's role without adding anything to the base word. However, conversion is a type of zero-derivation.
New answer posted
a month agoContributor-Level 10
Here's a list of some of the best books for conversion in grammar:
Book | Author/ Publisher |
---|---|
Practical English Usage | Michael Swan |
English Grammar in Use | Raymond Murphy |
A Communicative Grammar of English | Geoffrey Leech & Jan Svartvik |
Word Formation in English | Ingo Plag |
New answer posted
a month agoContributor-Level 10
Here's a list of examples of conversion in English:
Word | Converted Form | Example of Conversion |
---|---|---|
Google (noun) | To google (verb) | I'll ask the new joinee to google |
Scan (verb) | A scan (noun) | Because of her injury, she had to undergo a scan. |
Drive | A drive (noun) | Jane went on a drive with Bingley. |
Open | To open (verb) | Just ask him to open the windows. |
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