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Rhetorical techniques in reading slogans
Rhetorical techniques in reading slogans: metaphor, personification, exaggeration, parallelism, antithesis, etc.
The major categories of rhetorical techniques include:
Metaphor, analogy (also known as analogy, divided into personification and objectification), avoidance of repetition, change of use, layering, underlay ( set off), set off (contrast, set off), inverted text, inversion, overlapping sounds, overlapping words, top truth (also known as thimble, linked beads), contrast, duality (antagonism, team battle, pairing), renovation , repetition, rhetorical question, irony, word imitation, imitation, whitewash, separate inheritance (parallel mention, combined narration, combined statement); overlapping and complex, compound partial meaning, *** use, combined statement, call out.
Intersubstantiation, intertextuality, conversion, loop, palindrome, hypocrisy, metonymy, question, ambiguity, parallelism, connection, imitation, brocade, linkage, exaggeration, warning, indication Now, pun, tautology, overlap, reference, allusion, quotation, transfer, must be true, homophony, rest, symbol, mosaic, word analysis, euphemism, euphemism, synesthesia (transception, transference), jump Take off, transfer the text.
Metony:
There is a correlation between the ontology and the object of metonymy. The usage of metonymy is to borrow things related to the ontology to refer to the ontology. Ancient armies carried their own unique flags when marching and fighting. The flags were used not only to distinguish between ourselves and the enemy, but also to indicate the direction of the army's advance. Therefore, flags can be used to refer to the army. "One hundred thousand banners" means "one hundred thousand banners". "Flags" cannot make the action of "cutting", and those who can make the action of "cutting" must be human beings, so "one hundred thousand banners" refers to "one hundred thousand troops".
Similarly, in ancient times, when an enemy invaded, beacon smoke was lit at the border to alert the police, so "beacon smoke" and "wolf smoke" have become synonymous with war. "The Ten Years of War in the South" is the "Ten Years of the War in the South". Beacon smoke: A fire that was lit on a high platform as an alarm when an enemy invaded on the ancient border. Later, it generally referred to war or war. Just think about it and you will know that there is no similarity between "flag" and "army", "beacon smoke" and "war", so it can be judged that the use of these two words is not a metaphor.
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