a Jimena Mishelle 1 éve
60
Még több ilyen
There are some suffixes, for example, diminutive, argumentative, pejorative
and other, which add an emotive note or a value-judgment to the meaning of the stem.
It often happens that political and others slogans become so heavily charged with emotion,
that the latter will commpletely supersede their objective sense.
The mos ordinary and prosaic, may, in certain contexts, be surrounded by an emotive aura.
The phonetic structure of a word may gives rise to emotive effects in two different ways.
Words may lose their evocative power as they pass from a restricted milieu into common usage.
"Law of diminishing returns"
Hyperbolical terms are even more affected for this law.
Such expressions become fashionable and how quickly they go out of fashion.
Constant repetition has taken the edge of many comparisons and metaphors.
The more often we repeat an expressive term of phrase, the less efective it will be.
Loss of motivation
May also deprive words of their emotive colouring.
A term which is no longer felt to be onomatopoeic will lose the expressiveness it had derived from the harmony between sound and sense.
Slogans and key-words
Which held the stage at one time in politics, art, philosofy and others spheres may, with changed circumtances, lose their relevance and cease to arose strong feelings.
Are fairly constant in a given period but may weaken, or disappear altogether, in the course of time.
Are ephemeral, contextual or purely subjective
Syntactical devices
The most valuable emotive devices in syntax is word-order.
Lexical
A kindred figure of speech, whose chief function is to give vent to strong, feelings is exageration or hyperbole.
The most potent available for emotive and expressive purpose is figurative language.
This can work by comparison or metaphor.
Phonetic
In some languages, these "phonostylistic" devices,are systematically organized.
Under the stress of emotion, the shape of ours words may be altered in different ways.
Some are universal.
Others are peculiar to a given language.
Generic nature
"abstractness"
Non-distinctive features
e.g. size, shape, colour of a particular apple
Distinctive features
e.g. common to all the objects of which we use the word apple
Words denote classes of things bounded together by come common element