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高级英语(1)修辞格汇总 .12教学文稿

高级英语(1)修辞格汇总  .12教学文稿
高级英语(1)修辞格汇总  .12教学文稿

高级英语(1)修辞格汇总2014.12

一、词语修辞格

(1)simile 明喻

① ...a memory that seemed phonographic

②“Mama,” Wangero said sweet as a bird .“can I have these old quilts?”

③Most American remember M. T. as the father of...

④Hair is all over his head a foot long and hanging from his chin like a kinky mule tail.

⑤Impressed with her they worshiped the well-turned phrase, the cute shape, the scalding humor that erupted like bubbles in lye.

⑥My skin is like an uncooked barley pancake.

⑦She gasped like a bee had stung her.

(2)metaphor 暗喻

①It is a vast, sombre cavern of a room,…

②Little donkeys with harmoniously tinkling bells thread their way among the throngs of people entering and leaving the bazaar.

③The dye-market, the pottery market and the carpenters’ market lie elsewhere in the maze of vaulted streets which honeycomb the bazaar. A

④the last this intermezzo came to an end…

⑤…showing just enough of her thin body enveloped in pink skirt and red blouse…

⑥After I tripped over it two or three times he told me …

⑦Mark Twain --- Mirror of America

⑧saw clearly ahead a black wall of night...

⑨main artery of transportation in the young nation's heart

⑩All would resurface in his books...that he soaked up...

?When railroads began drying up the demand...

?...the epidemic of gold and silver fever...

?Twain began digging his way to regional fame...

?Mark Twain honed and experimented with his new writing muscles...

?The Duchess of Croydon kept firm, tight rein on her racing mind. ?Her voice was a whiplash.

?and launch this cataract of horrors upon mankind…

?But all this fades away before the spectacle which is now unfolding.

?I see the German bombers and fighters in the sky, still smarting from many a British whipping, delighted to find what they believe is an easier and a safer prey.

?I see the Russian soldiers standing on the thresthold of their native land, guarding the fields which their fathers have tilled from time immemorial.

21The Nazi regime is devoid of all theme and principle except appetite and racial domination. 22I suppose they will be rounded up in hordes.

23We shall fight him by land, we shall fight him by sea, we shall fight him in the air, until, with God’s help, we have rid the earth of his shadow and liberated its peoples from his yoke.

(3)metonymy 借代,转喻

①In short, all of these publications are written in the language that the Third International describes

②The Washington Post, in an editorial captioned "Keep Your Old Webster's"

(4)synecdoche 提喻

①The case had erupted round my head

②The case had erupted round my head Or what of those sheets and jets of air that are now being used, in place of old-fashioned oak and hinges ...

③But neither his vanity nor his purse is any concern of the dictionary's

(5)personification 拟人

①…until you round a corner and see a fairyland of dancing flashes…

②Every here and there, a doorway gives a glimpse of a sunlit courtyard, perhaps before a mosque or

a caravanserai, where camels lie disdainfully chewing their hay…

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③...to literature's enduring gratitude...

④The grave world smiles as usual...

⑤Bitterness fed on the man...

⑥America laughed with him.

⑦Personal tragedy haunted his entire life.

(6)transferred epithet 移就

①Darrow had whispered throwing a reassuring arm round my shoulder

②The obese body shook in an appreciative chuckle.

③Two high points of color a ppeared in the paleness of the Duchess of Croydon’s cheeks.

④I have been exhilarated by two days of storms, but above all I love these long purposeless days in which I shed all that I have ever been. (V. Sackville-West, No Signposts in the Sea)

(7)hyperbole 夸张

①The roadway is about twelve feet wide, but it is narrowed every few yards by little stalls where goods of every conceivable kind are sold.

②I feel my whole face warming from the heat waves it throws out.

③If Hitler invaded Hell and would make at least a favorable reference to the Devil in the House of Commons.

④I see the ten thousand villages of Russia where the means of existence is wrung so hardly from the soil, but where there are still primordial human joys, where maidens laugh and children play.

⑤...cruise through eternal boyhood and ...endless summer of freedom...

⑥The cast of characters... - a cosmos.

⑦America laughed with him.

⑧The trial that rocked the world

⑨His reputation as an authority on Scripture is recognized throughout the world."

(8)oxymoron 矛盾修饰法

Dudley Field Malene called my conviction a, "victorious defeat. " (9)euphemism 委婉语

①… a motley band of Confederate guerrillas who diligently avoided contact with the enemy.

②...men's final release from earthly struggle

(10)irony -- t he use of words to express something different from and often opposite to their literal meaning. 反语用词语表达与它们的字面意思相异或相反的用法

①Hiroshima—the “liveliest” city in Japan

②“Maggie’s brain is like an elephant’s”. Wangero said, laughing .

③… until we are marching backwards to the glorious age of the sixteenth century

(11)sarcasm -- a cutting, often ironic remark intended to wound. 讽刺,挖苦意在伤害他人的尖刻的,常带讽刺意味的话语

①My friend the attorney-general says that John Scopes knows what he is here for," Darrow drawled. "I know what he is here for, too. He is here because ignorance and bigotry(顽固) are, and it is

a mighty strong combination.

②There is some doubt about that.

③ a concept of how things get written that throws very little light on Lincoln but a great deal on Life

④the Post’ s editorial fails to explain what is wrong with the definition, we can only infer from "so simple" a thing that the writer takes the plain, downright, man-in-the-street attitude that a door is a door and any damn fool knows that

(12)ridicule(嘲笑)Words or actions intended to evoke contemptuous laughter at or feelings toward a person or thing 愚弄有意激起对某人或某事的蔑视的笑或看不起的感情而说的话或做的事

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①Bryan, ageing and paunchy, was assisted

②Resolutely he strode to the stand, carrying a palm fan like a sword to repel his enemies.

③Bryan mopped his bald dome in silence.

(13)pun 双关

①DARWIN IS RIGHT – INSIDE.

②Benjamin Franklin: “If we don’t hang together, we shall most assuredly hang separately.” (Peter stone and Sherman Edwards. 1776) 如果我们不能紧密地团结在一起,那就必然分散地走上绞刑架。

(14)zeugma轭式搭配法the use of a word to modify or govern two or more words usu. in such a manner that it applies to each in different sense or makes sense with only one

①-----The issue of New York Times …hail the Second as the authority… and the Third as a scandal…

②Ship-owners fear that saving jobs in Britain’s ailing shipyard com es before saving its merchant fleet. (Andrew Neil. Britannia Rues the Waves) 船主们担心英国把在奄奄一息的造船厂中保证就业看得比拯救商船队更重要。

(15)allusion典故

Churchill, he reverted to this theme, and I asked whether for him, the arch anti-communist, this was not bowing down in the House of Rimmon.

(16)Litotes (double negative) (语轻意重法,间接肯定法) A negative before another word to indicate a strong affirmative in the opposite direction.

I had not the slightest doubt where our duty and our policy lay.

I was not a little upset.

二、结构修辞格(17)parallelism 排比

①We will never parley; we will never negotiate with Hitler or any of his gang. We shall fight him by land, we shall fight him by sea, we shall fight him in the air.

②We shall fight him by land. We shall fight him by sea. We shall fight him in the air.

③behind all this glare behind all this storm

④I see the Russian soldiers standing … I see them guarding... I see the ten thousand villages... I see that small group…

⑤that is our policy and that is our declaration

⑥We shall be fortified and encouraged in our efforts. We shall be strengthened and not weakened in determination and resources.

⑦Let us learn the lessons already taught by such cruel experience. Let us redouble our exertions…

(18)repetition 重复

①We have but one aim and one single, irrevocable purpose.

②He has so long thrived and prospered.

③We will never parley, we will never negotiate...

④From this nothing will turn us---nothing.

(19)anticlimax 反高潮

“Seldom has a city gained such world renown, and I am proud and happy to welcome you to Hiroshima, a town known throughout the world for its-oysters”.

(20)antithesis 对比

①Any man or state who fights on against Nazidom will have our aid. Any man or state who marches with Hitler is our foe…

②"The Christian believes that man came from above. The evolutionist believes that he must have come from below

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④ ...took unholy verbal shots at the Holy Land...

⑤ ...a world which will lament them a day and forget them forever

(21)

rhetorical question 修辞疑问句

① Was I not at the scene of the crime?

② Who ever knew a Johnson with a quick tongue? Who can even imagine me looking a strange white man in the eye?

③ In what conceivable way does our car concern you?

(22)

periodic sentence 圆周句 -- A complex sentence, esp. one consisting of

several clauses, constructed as part of a formal speech or oration and the most important part is put at the end of the sentence.

The past, with its crimes, its follies, and its tragedies, flashes away.

三、 音韵修辞格 (23)

头韵法(alliteration )在文句中有两个以上连

结在一起的词或词组,其开头的音节有同样的字母或声音,以增强语言的节奏感。

① …a s the fastest train in the world slipped to a stop...

② I felt sick, and ever since then they have been testing and treating me.

I see advancing upon all this in hideous onslaught the Nazi war machine, with its clanking,

heel-clicking, dandified Prussian officers, it crafty expert agents fresh from the cowing and tying down of a dozen countries. ⑦ …just as the cause of any Russi an fighting for his hearth and home is the cause of free men and free peoples in every quarter of the globe. ⑧

I see also the dull, drilled, docile, brutish masses of the Hun soldiery plodding on like a

swarm of crawling locusts. (simile) (24) 准押韵(Assonance ),元韵,母韵,半谐音,它是重读音节中元音的重

复。

between the much-touted Second International (1934) and the much-clouted Third International (1961)

(25)

辅韵(Consonance ),指的是词尾复印或句尾非重读音节的重复。

... when bigots lighted faggots to burn (26)

拟声法(onomatopoeia) 它是指用词语模拟客观事物的声音,以增强讲话或

文字的实际音感。 ① As you approach it, a tinkling and banging and clashing begins to impinge on your ear. ② … its creaks blending with the squeaking and rumbling of the grinding-wheels and the occasional grunts and sighs of the camels.

③ The house detective clucked his tongue reprovingly.

Lesson 1 The Middle Eastern Bazaar

1.…as the burnished copper catches the light of innumberable lamps and braziers.

2.…until you round a corner and see a fairyland of dancing flashes…(metaphor and personification)

3.As you approach it, a tinkling and banging and clashing begins to impinge on your ear.

4.Every here and there, a doorway gives a glimpse of a sunlit courtyard, perhaps before a mosque or

a caravanserai, where camels lie disdainfully chewing their hay…(personification)

5.It is a vast, sombre cavern of a room, some thirty feet high and sixty feet square, and so thick with

the dust of centuries that the mudbrick walls and vaulted roof are only dimly visible. (metaphor) 6.Little monkeys with harmoniously tinkling bells thread their way among the throngs of people

entering and leaving the bazaar.(metaphor)

7.Quickly the trickle becomes a flood of glistening linseed oil as the beam sinks earthwards, taut

and protesting, its creaks blending with the squeaking and rumbling of the grinding-wheels and the occassional grunts and sighs of the camels.

8.The dye-market, the pottery market and the carpenters’ market lie elsewhere in the maze of

vaulted streets which honeycomb the bazaar. (metaphor)

9.The roadway is about twelve feet wide, but it is narrowed every few yards by little stalls where

goods of every conceivable kind are sold.

Lesson 2 Hiroshima—the “Liveliest” City in Japan

1.“Seldom has a city gained such world renown, and I am proud and happy to welcome you to

Hiroshima, a town known throughout the world for its-oysters”. (anticlimax)

2.…as the fastest train in the world slipped to a stop...

3.…where thousands upon thousands of people had been slain in one second, where thousands upon

thousands of others had lingered on to die in slow agony.

4.At last this intermezzo came to an end…

5.But later my hair began to fall out , and my belly turned to water .I felt sick ,and ever since then

they have been testing and treating me .(alliteration)

6.Each day that I escape death, each day of suffering that helps to free me from earthly cares, I

make a new little paper bird, and add it to the others.

7.Hiroshima—the “liveliest” city in Japan

8.I felt sick, and ever since then they have been testing and treating me.

9.The rather arresting spectacle of little old Japan adrift amid beige concrete skycrapers is the very

symbol of the incessant struggle between the kimono and the miniskirt.

10.There were fresh bows, and the faces grew more and more serious each time the name Hiroshima

was repeated .(synecdoche)

11.Was I not at the scene of the crime? (rhetorical question)

Lesson 4 Everyday Use for your grandmama

1.“Maggie’s brain is like an elephant’s”. Wangero said ,laughing .(ironic)

2.“Mama,” Wangero said sweet as a bird .“can I have these old quilts?”(simile)

3.…showing just enough of her thin bo dy enveloped in pink skirt and red blouse…

4.After I tripped over it two or three times he told me …(metaphor)

5.And she stops and tries to dig a well in the sand with her toe. (exaggeration)

6.Hair is all over his head a foot long and hanging from his chin like a kinky mule tail. (simile)

7.Have you ever seen a lame animal, perhaps dog run over by some careless person rich enough to

own a car ,sidle up to someone who is ignorant enough to be kind of him?(metaphor)

8.I feel my whole face warming from the heat waves it throws out .(exaggeration)

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9.Impressed with her they worshiped the well-turned phrase, the cute shape, the scalding humor that

erupted like bubbles in lye. (simile)

10.It is like an extended living room. (simile)

11.Johnny Carson has much to do to keep up with my quick and witty tongue.

12.My skin is like an uncooked barley pancake. (simile)

13.She gasped like a bee had stung her.(simile)

14.Wangero said, sweet as a bird. (simile)

15.Who ever knew a Johnson with a quick tongue? Who can even imagine me looking a strange

white man in the eye? (rhetorical question)

16.You didn’t even have to look close to see where hands pushing the dasher up and down to make

butter had left a kind of sink in the wood .(metaphor)

Lesson 5 Speech on Hitler’s Invasion of the U. S. S. R.

1.…just as the cause of any Russian fighting for his hearth and home is the cause of free men and

free peoples in every quarter of the globe.

2.…the subjugation of the Western Hemisphere to his will and to his system.

3.Any man or state who fights on against Nazidom will have our aid. Any man or state who

marches with Hitler is our foe…

4.Behind all this glare, behind all this storm, I see that small group of villainous men who plan,

organize, and launch this cataract of horrors upon mankind…

5.But all this fades away before the spectacle which is now unfolding.(metaphor)

6.Churchill ,he reverted to this theme, and I asked whether for him, the arch anti-communist ,this

was not bowing down in the House of Rimmon.(metaphor)

7.From this nothing will turn us---nothing. 8.I see advancing upon all this in hideous onslaught the Nazi war machine, with its clanking, heel-

clicking, dandified Prussian officers, it crafty expert agents fresh from the cowing and tying down of a dozen countries.

9.I see also the dull, drilled, docile, brutish masses of the Hun soldiery plodding on like a swarm of

crawling locusts. (simile)

10.I see the German bombers and fighters in the sky, still smarting from many a British whipping,

delighted to find what they believe is an easier and a safer prey. (Metaphor)

11.I see the Russian soldiers standing on the thresthold of their native land, guarding the fields which

their fathers have tilled from time immemorial. (Metaphor)

12.I see the ten thousand villages of Russia where the means of existence is wrung so hardly from the

soil, but where there are still primordial human joys, where maidens laugh and children play. 13.I see them guarding their homes where mothers and wives pray---ah, yes, for there are times when

all pray---for the safety of their beloved ones, the return of the bread-winner, of their champion, of their protector.

14.I suppose they will be rounded up in hordes.

15.If Hitler invaded Hell and would make at least a favorable reference to the Devil in the House of

Commons.(exaggeration)

16.On the contrary, we shall be fortified and encouraged in our efforts to rescue mankind from his

tyranny. We shall be strengthened and not weakened in determination and in resources.

17.That is our policy and that is our declaration.

18.We shall fight him by land, we shall fight him by sea, we shall fight him in the air, until, with

God’s help, we have rid the earth of his shadow and liberated its peoples from his yoke.

19.We will never parley; we will never negotiate with Hitler or any of his gang. We shall fight him

by land, we shall fight him by sea, we shall fight him in the air. (Parallelism)

20.We shall fight him by land. We shall fight him by sea. We shall fight him in the air. (Parallelism)

21.behind all this glare behind all this storm (Parallelism)

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22.I see the Russian soldiers standing … I see them guardin g... I see the ten thousand villages... I see

that small group… (Parallelism)

23.that is our policy and that is our declaration (Parallelism)

24.We shall be fortified and encouraged in our efforts. We shall be strengthened and not weakened in

determination and resources. (Parallelism)

25.Let us learn the lessons already taught by such cruel experience. Let us redouble our exertions…

(Parallelism)

26.We have but one aim and one single, irrevocable purpose. (Repetition)

27.He has so long thrived and prospered. (Repetition)

28.We will never parley, we will never negotiate... (Repetition)

Lesson 6 Blackmail

1.As a result the nerves of both the Duke and Duchess were excessively frayed when the muted

buzzer of the outer door eventually sounded.

2.The obese body shook in an appreciative chuckle.

3.His wife shot him a swift, warning glance.

4.You drove there in your fancy Jaguar, and you took a lady friend.

5.The Duchess of Croydon kept firm, tight rein on her racing mind. metaphor

6.Her voice was a whiplash.

7.Eyes bored into him.

8.The house detective clucked his tongue reprovingly.

9.In what conceivable way does our car concern you?

Lesson 9

Metaphor

Mark Twain --- Mirror of America

saw clearly ahead a black wall of night...

main artery of transportation in the young nation's heart

All would resurface in his books...that he soaked up...

When railroads began drying up the demand...

...the epidemic of gold and silver fever...

Twain began digging his way to regional fame...

Mark Twain honed and experimented with his new writing muscles...

Simile:

Most American remember M. T. as the father of...

...a memory that seemed phonographic

Hyperbole:

...cruise through eternal boyhood and ...endless summer of freedom...

The cast of characters... - a cosmos.

America laughed with him.

Personification:

...to literature's enduring gratitude...

the grave world smiles as usual...

Bitterness fed on the man...

America laughed with him.

Personal tragedy haunted his entire life.

Antithesis:

...between what people claim to be and what they really are..

...took unholy verbal shots at the Holy Land...

...a world which will lament them a day and forget them forever

Euphemism:

… a motley band of Confederate guerrillas who diligently avoided contact with the enemy.

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...men's final release from earthly struggle

Alliteration

...the slow, sleepy, sluggish-brained sloths stayed at home

...with a dash and daring...

...a recklessness of cost or consequences...

Metonymy

...his pen would prove mightier than his pickaxe

Lesson 10

1) The trial that rocked the world (hyperbole)

2) Darrow had whispered throwing a reassuring arm round my shoulder (transferred epithet)

3) The case had erupted round my head (synecdoche)

4) Bryan, ageing and paunchy, was assisted (ridicule)

5) and it is a mighty strong combination (sarcasm)

6) until we are marching backwards to the glorious age of the sixteenth century (irony)

7) There is some doubt about that.(sarcasm)

8) "The Christian believes that man came from above. The evolutionist believes that he must have come from below"(antithesis)

9) "His reputation as an authority on Scripture is recognized throughout the world." (hyperbole)

10) Resolutely he strode to the stand, carrying a palm fanlike a sword to repel his enemies. (ridicule,simile)

11) Bryan mopped his bald dome in silence.(ridicule)

12) Dudley Field Malene called my conviction a, "victorious defeat. " (oxymoron )

Lesson 11 1) a concept of how things get written that throws very little light on Lincoln but a great deal on Life (alliteration and sarcasm)

2) between the much-touted Second International (1934) and the much-clouted Third International (1961) (assonance and antithesis)

3) The Washington Post, in an editorial captioned "Keep Your Old Webster's" (metonymy)

4) In short, all of these publications are written in the language that the Third International describes (metonymy)

5) But neither his vanity nor his purse is any concern of the dictionary's (synecdoche)

6) the Post’ s editorial fails to explain what is wrong with the definition, we can only infer from "so simple" a thing that the writer takes the plain, downright, man-in-the-street attitude that a door is a door and any damn fool knows that(sarcasm )

7) Or what of those sheets and jets of air that are now being used, in place of old-fashioned oak and hinges ...(synecdoche)

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高级英语第一册修辞(1-9课)

Figures of speech: simile, metaphor, personification, synecdoche, anticlimax, metonymy, repetition, exaggeration, euphemism, antonomasia, parody.

1)Little donkeys with harmoniously tinkling bells thread their way among the throngs

of people entering and leaving the bazaar.(metaphor)-----Page1,Lesson1.

2)It grows louder and more distinct ,until you round a corner and see a fairyland of

dancing flashes ,as the burnished copper catches the light of innumerable lamps and braziers.(metaphor and personification)---------- P2,L1.

3)The dye-market ,the pottery-market ,and the carpenters’ market lie elsewhere in the

maze of vaulted streets which honeycomb this bazaar.(metaphor)-----P3,L1

4)Every here and there, a doorway gives a glimpse of a sunlit courtyard, perhaps

before a mosque or a caravanserai, where camels lie disdainfully chewing their hay, while… (personification)------P3, L1.

5)It is a vast ,somber cavern of a room ,some thirty feet high and sixty feet square ,

and so thick with the dust of centuries that the mudbrick roof are only dimly

visible.(metaphor)---P4,L1

6)There were fresh bows ,and the faces grew more and more serious each time the

name Hiroshima was repeated .(synecdoche)------P15,L27)“Seldom has a city gained such world renown, and I am proud and happy to

welcome you to Hiroshima, a town known throughout the world for its-oysters”.

(anticlimax)----P15, L2.

8)But later my hair began to fall out , and my belly turned to water .I felt sick ,and

ever since then they have been testing and treating me .(alliteration)-----P17, L2.

9)Acre by acre ,the rain forest is being burned to create fast pasture for fast-food

beef .(alliteration)-----P30,L3

10)According to our guide ,the biologist Tom Lovejoy, there are more different species

of birds in each square mile of the Amazon than exist in all of North America-which means we are silently thousands of songs we have ever heard .(metonymy)----

P31,L3.

11)What should we feel toward these ghosts in the sky?(metaphor)---P32,L3.

12)Have you ever seen a lame animal ,perhaps dog run over by some careless person

rich enough to own a car ,sidle up to someone who is ignorant enough to be kind of him?(metaphor)

13)And she stops and tries to dig a well in the sand with her toe. (exaggeration)----P58,

L4.

14)I feel my whole face warming from the heat waves it throws out .(exaggeration)

15)After I tripped over it two or three times he told me to just call him Hakim-a-

barber.(metaphor)-------P60,L4.

16)“Maggie’s brain is like an elephant’s”.Wangero said ,laughing .(ironic)—P62, L4.

17)You didn’t even have to look close to see where hands pushing the dasher up and

down to make butter had left a kind of sink in the wood .(metaphor)----P62,L4. 18)“Mama,”Wangero said sweet as a bird .“can I have these old quilts?”(simile)---P63,

L4.

19)She gasped like a bee had stung her .(simile)

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20)Churchill ,he reverted to this theme, and I asked whether for him, the arch anti-

communist ,this was not bowing down in the House of Rimmon.(metaphor)

21)If Hitler invaded Hell and would make at least a favorable reference to the Devil in

the House of Commons.(exaggeration)----P79,L5.

22)But all this fades away before the spectacle which is now unfolding.(metaphor)

23) I see also the dull, drilled, docile, brutish masses of the Hun soldiery plodding on like

a swarm of crawling locusts.(simile)

24)I see the Russian soldiers standing on the threshold of their native land ,guarding the fields which their fathers have tilled from time immemorial.(Metaphor)----P79, L5. 25)I see the German bombers and fighters in the sky ,street smarting from many a British whipping to find what they believe is an easier and a safer prey.(Metaphor)---P80, L5.

26) We will never parley; we will never negotiate with Hitler or any of his gang. We

shall fight him by land, we shall fight him by sea, we shall fight him in the air.

(Parallelism)

27) Just as the industrial Revolution took over an immense range of tasks from men’s

muscles and enormously expanded productivity. (Metonymy)

28) The back door opens to let out the dog .The TV set blinks on with the day’s first

newscast: a selective rundown… (Personification)----P115, L7.

29) The latter-day Aladdin, still snugly abed, then presses a button on a bedside box and

issues a string of business and personal memos. (Antonomasia)

30) Following eyeball-to-eyeball consultations with the butcher and the baker and grocer

on the tube, she hits a button to commandeer s upplies for tonight’s dinner party.

(Synecdoche)

31) The microelectronic revolution promises to ease, enhance and simplify life in ways undreamed of even by the utopians. (Synecdoche)----P116, L7.

32) In the microelectronic village, the home will again be the center of society, as it was

before the industrial Revolution. (Metaphor)

33) the Device’s ubiquitous eye, sensing where people are at all times, will similarly the

lights on an off as needed. (Metaphor)34) Next to health, heart, and home, happiness for mobile Americans depends upon the

automobile. (Alliteration, metonymy repetition,)-----P118, L7.

35) Computer technology may make the car, as we know it, a Smithsonian antique.

(Antonomasia)

36) For the mighty army of consumers, the ultimate applications of the computer

revolution are still around the bend of a silicon circuit. (Parody)----P120, L7

37) His competitors envisioned the greater potential for entertainment and art, where he

saw internal memos, someone else saw Beethoven. (Synecdoche)

38) Will government regulate messages sent out on this vast data highway? (Metaphor)

39) Philips Interactive, for example, has dozens of titles, among them a tour of the

Smithsonian, in which the viewer selects which corridor to enter by clicking on the screen. (Antonomasia)

40) She says consumers would be a little like information “cowboys,”rounding up data

from computer based archives and information services.(Simile)

41) To prevent getting trampled by a stampede of data, viewers will rely on programmed

electronic selectors that could go out into the info corral and rape in the subjects the viewer wants. (Metaphor)

42) Maes and others concede that there’s a dark side to all these bright dreams.

(Metaphor)

43) And where there are agents, can counteragents be far behind: spies who might like to

keep tabs on the activities of your electronic butlers? (Parody)----P137, L8.

44) Indeed, intelligent agents could be a gold mine of information. (Metaphor)-----P137, L8.

23)A pleasant surprise, of course: What would they do if parent and child came on the

show only to curse out and insult each other?

24)Who ever knew Johnson with a quick tongue?

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25)Who can ever imagine me looking a strange white man in the eye?

26)Why don’t you do a dance around the ashes

27)“Why don’t you take one or two of the others?” I asked. (24-28)

(rhetorical question)

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