Phonetic EMs and SDs



Expressive means, stylistic means, stylistic devices and other terms are all used indiscriminately For our purposes it is necessary to make a distinction between expressive means and stylistic devices. All stylistic means of a language can be divided into expressive means, which are used in some specific way, and special devices called stylistic devices. The expressive means of a language are those phonetic means, morphological forms, means of word-building, and lexical, phraseological and syntactical forms, all of which function in the language for emotional or logical intensification of the utterance. These intensifying forms of the language have been fixed in grammars and dictionaries. Some of them are normalized, and good dictionaries label them as intensifiers. In most cases they have corresponding neutral synonymous forms. The most powerful expressive means of any language are phonetic. Pitch, melody, stress, pausation, drawling, drawling out certain syllables, whispering, a sing-song manner of speech and other ways of using the voice are more effective than any other means in intensifying the utterance emotionally or logically.

Onomatopoeia

Onomatopoeia is a combination of speech-sounds which aims at imitating sounds produced in nature (wind, sea, thunder, etc), by things (machines or tools, etc), by people (sighing, laughter, patter of feet, etc) and by animals. Combinations of speech sounds of this type will inevitably be associated with whatever produces the natural sound. Therefore the relation between onomatopoeia and the phenomenon it is supposed to represent is one of metonomy.

There are two varieties of onomatopoeia: direct and indirect. D i-r e с t onomatopoeia is contained in words that imitate natu­ral sounds, as ding-dong, buzz, bang, cuckoo, tintinnabulation, mew, ping-pong, roar and the like.

These words have different degrees of imitative quality. Some of them immediately bring to mind whatever it is that produces the sound. Others require the exercise of a certain amount of imagination to decipher it.

Onomatopoetic words can be used in a transferred meaning, as for instance, ding-dong, which represents the sound of bells rung continu­ously, may mean 1) noisy, 2) strenuously contested. Examples are: a ding-dong struggle, a ding-dong go at something.

Alliteration

Alliteration is a phonetic stylistic device which aims at imparting a melodic effect to the utterance. The essence of this device lies in the repetition of similar sounds, in particular consonant sounds, in close succession, particularly at the beginning of successive words

Alliteration, like most phonetic expressive means, does not bear any lexical or other meaning unless we agree that a sound mean­ing exists as such. But even, so we may not be able to specify clearly the character of this meaning, and the term will merely suggest that a certain amount of information is contained in the repetition of sounds, as is the case with the repetition of lexical units.

However certain sounds if repeated may produce an effect that can be specified.

Assonance

Rhythm

Rhythm exists in all spheres of human activity and assumes multifarious forms. It is a mighty weapon in stirring up emotions whatever its nature or origin, whether it is musical, mechanical, or symmetrical as in architecture. Rhythm can be perceived only provided that there is some kind of experience in catching the opposite elements or features in their cor­relation, and, what is of paramount importance, experience in catching the regularity of alternating patterns. Rhythm is primarily a perio­dicity, which requires specification as to the type of periodicity. According to some investigations, rhythmical periodicity in verse "requires intervals of about three quarters of a second between succes­sive peaks of periods."1 It is a deliberate arrangement of speech into regularly recurring units intended to be grasped as a definite periodi­city which makes rhythm a stylistic device. Rhythm in language necessarily demands oppositions that alter­nate: long, short; stressed, unstressed; high, low and other contrasting segments of speech. Some theoreticians maintain that rhythm can only be perceived if there are occasional deviations from the regularity of alternations. Rhythm is flexible and sometimes an effort is re­quired to perceive it. In classical verse it is perceived at the back­ground of the meter. In accented verse by the number of stresses in a line. In prose by the alternation of similar syntactical patterns. Rhythm in­tensifies the emotions. It also specifies emotions. Rhythm reveals itself most conspicuously in music, dance and verse. We have so far dealt with verse because the properties of rhythm in language' are most observable in this mode of communication. We shall now proceed to the analysis of rhythm in prose, bearing in mind that the essential properties of prose rhythm are governed by the same general rules, though not so apparent, perhaps, as in verse, and falling under different parameters of analysis.

Rhyme

Rhyme is the repetition of identical or similar terminal sound combinations of words. Rhyming words are generally placed at a regular distance from each other. In verse they are usually placed at the end of the corresponding lines. Identity and particularly similarity of sound combinations may be relative. They can be divided into two main groups: vowel rhymes and consonant rhymes. In vowel-rhymes the vowels of the syllables in correspond­ing words are identical, but the consonants may be different as in fleshfreshpress. Consonant rhymes, on the contrary, show concor­dance in consonants and disparity in vowels, as in worth—forth; taletoolTrebletrouble; flunglong. The peculiarity of rhymes of this type is that the combina­tion of words is made to sound like one word — a device which inevi­tably gives a colloquial and sometimes a humorous touch to the utterance. Thus rhyme may be said to possess two seemingly contradictory func­tions: dissevering on the one hand, and consolidating on the other. As in many stylistic devices, these two functions of rhyme are realized simultaneously in a greater or lesser degree depending on the distribution of the rhymes.


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