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Zeugma

(Redirected from Syllepsis)

This article is about the rhetorical concept of zeugma. For the historical city of Zeugma see Zeugma (city). For the literary magazine, see Zeugma (literary journal).

Zeugma (from the Greek word "ζεύγμα", meaning "yoke") is a figure of speech describing the joining of two or more parts of a sentence with a common verb or noun. A zeugma employs both ellipsis, the omission of words which are easily understood, and parallelism, the balance of several words or phrases. The result is a series of similar phrases joined or yoked together by a common and implied noun or verb. In a modern sense, the zeugma has been classified as a synonym for syllepsis, a particular kind of zeugma, although there is a clear distinction between the two in classical treatises written on the subject. Henry Peacham praises the “delight of the ear” in the use of the zeugma in rhetoric, but stresses to avoid “too many clauses.” The zeugma is categorized according to the location and part of speech of the governing word.


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Prozeugma

The prozeugma (also called the Synezeugmenon or the Latin praeiunctio) is a zeugma where a verb in the first part of a sentence governs several later clauses in series.

“She conquered shame with passion, fear with audacity, reason with madness.” (also an example of a tricolon)

Mezozeugma

The mezozeugma is a zeugma where a verb in the middle of the sentence governs several parallel clauses on either side.

Hypozeugma

The hypozeugma, also called an adjunctio in Latin, is a zeugma where a verb falls at the end of a sentence and governs several parallel clauses that precede it.

"Either with disease or age, physical beauty fades"
"Does not the nightly watch of the Palatine, Does not guard of the city, Does not the fear of the people, Does not the union of all good men, Does not of the holding of the senate in this most defensible place, Does not the looks and faces of these people move you?"

By suspending the verb until the end, the listener is unable to determine what action the atrocities will cause, which is precisely the point Cicero intends to make. In this manner, the hypozeugma lends itself well to the forming of a periodic sentence.

Following a hypozeugma with a prozeugma can create a chiasmus(The foundation of freedom and the fountain of equity is preserved by laws. Our lawless acts destroy our wealth and threaten our custody of life.)

Diazeugma

The diazeugma is a zeugma where a noun governs two or more verbs. Latin rhetoricians further divide the diazeugma according to the placement of the subject and verbs.

Diazeugma Disjunction

The subject appears at the beginning of the sentence and each verb follows in its respective clause.

The Roman people destroyed Numantia, razed Carthage, demolished Corinth, and overthrew Fregella.
Physical beauty: with disease it fades; with age it dies.
Diazeugma Conjunction

The subject appears in the middle of a sentence and may take the place of a conjunction.

Hypozeuxis

The Hypozeuxis is the opposite of a zeugma, where each subject has its own verb.

Syllepsis

Syllepsis is the term given to a zeugma when the clauses are not parallel either in meaning or grammar. They are figures of speech in which one word simultaneously modifies two or more other words such that the modification must be understood differently with respect to each modified word. This creates a semantic incongruity which is often humorous.

Distributed Term Changes Meaning

The governing term can change meaning in its distribution, sometimes to comical effect.

alter cum res gestas tum etiam stadium atque auris adhibere posset.—Cicero, Pro Archia Poeta, (62)
the other was able to lend not only his achievements, but also his support and ears
Here thou, great Anna! whom three realms obey,
Dost sometimes counsel take - and sometimes tea.
Alexander Pope, The Rape of the Lock
He carried a strobe light and the responsibility for the lives of his men.
Tim O'Brien, The Things They Carried

Syllepsis can be used with idiomatic phrases to achieve a similar result:

Benjamin Franklin
Alanis Morissette, Head over Feet
I took her hand and took her home
Eve 6, "Girl Eyes"

Syllepsis with Ambiguous Grammar

Syllepses are occasionally produced in which the governing word does not agree grammatically with one or more of the words or clauses to which it is distributed.

The first subject is brought to our attention more ominously by the verb with which it agrees.

Examples of Syllepsis

See also

Sources

Categories


Rhetoric | Figures of speech

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