Information AboutWord Play |
| CATEGORIES ABOUT WORD PLAY | |
| rhetoric | |
| word games | |
| word playrhetoric | |
| word games | |
| word play | |
| linguistics | |
| rhetorical techniques | |
| persuasion techniques | |
| literary devices playing with meaning | |
| words | |
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Word play is a Literary Technique in which the nature of the words used themselves become part of the subject of the work. Pun s, phonetic mixups such as Spoonerisms , obscure words and meanings, clever Rhetoric al excursions, oddly formed sentences, and telling character names are common examples of word play. All writers engage in word play to some extent, but certain writers are particularly adept or committed to word play. Shakespeare was a noted punster. James Joyce --whose '' Ulysses '', and even more so, his '' Finnegans Wake '', are filled with brilliant writing and brilliant word play--is another noted word-player. For example, Joyce's phrase "they were yung and easily freudened" clearly conveys the meaning "young and easily frightened", but it also makes puns on the names of two famous Psychoanalysts , Jung and Freud . Other writers closely identified with word play include:
Plays can enter common usage as Neologism s. Word play is closely related to Word Game s, that is, games in which the point is manipulating words. See also Language Game for a linguist's variation. An extreme form of playing with words is creating a Fictional Language . A taxonomy of word play together with record-holding words in each category is available here: Taxonomy of Wordplay SEE ALSO
EXTERNAL LINKS See Also http://www.acrosticdoublespeak.com, a site defining a novel genre of Orwellian based satiric word play |
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