Difference between revisions of "Onomatopoeia"

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'''Onomatopoeia''' ([[adjective]] '''onomatopoeic''') is the use of words to imitate the sounds they are describing.  Wods like 'Boom!' and 'Crash' are everyday examples, as is the child's word, 'Nee-naw', trying to imitate the sound of its siren.  Advertisers often appeal to '''onomatopoeia''': "Snap, crackle, pop' is a slogan based on the sound of a cereal reacting to milk.  Comic strips adn garphic novels oftern invent new words to communicate the sounds of their scenes, often the vilent sounds: 'Ker-pow!' and 'Zap' are examples.
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'''Onomatopoeia''' ([[adjective]] '''onomatopoeic''') is a [[Figures of speech|figure of speech]] which uses words to imitate the sounds they are describing.  Words like 'Boom!' and 'Crash' are everyday examples, as is the child's word for an ambulance, 'Nee-naw', trying to imitate the sound of its siren.  Advertisers often appeal to '''onomatopoeia''': "Snap, crackle, pop" is a slogan based on the sound of a cereal reacting to milk.  Comic strips and graphic novels often invent new words to communicate the sounds of their scenes, often the violent sounds: 'Ker-pow!' and 'Zap' are examples.
  
 
Poets often use '''onomatopoeia'''.   
 
Poets often use '''onomatopoeia'''.   
  
The quotation given for alliteration, "the s'''<big>t</big>'''u'''<big>tt</big>'''e'''<big>r</big>'''ing '''<big>r</big>'''ifles’ '''<big>r</big>'''apid '''<big>r</big>'''a'''<big>tt</big>'''le", followed by "the monstrous anger of the guns", is an example of more than alliteration: it is also an example of Owen was trying to say what a battlefield of the first World War <u>sounded</u> like; in my view, he is remarkably successful in distinguishing between the deep, dull boom of heavy artillery ("monstrous anger of the guns") and the crisper, sharper crackling of the ordinary soldiers’ rifles.
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The quotation given for [[alliteration]], "the s'''<big>t</big>'''u'''<big>tt</big>'''e'''<big>r</big>'''ing '''<big>r</big>'''ifles' '''<big>r</big>'''apid '''<big>r</big>'''a'''<big>tt</big>'''le", followed by "the monstrous anger of the guns", is an example of more than alliteration: it is also an example of Owen trying to say what a battlefield of the First World War <u>sounded</u> like; in [[AWE]]'s view, he is remarkably successful in distinguishing between the deep, dull boom of heavy artillery ("monstrous anger of the guns") and the crisper, sharper crackling of the ordinary soldiers' rifles. '''Onomatopoeia''' is often reinforced by '''alliteration'''.
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'''Note on pronunciation''': '''Onomatopoeia''' is pronounced as six [[syllable]]s with the stress on the penultimate [[syllable]]: on-er-mat-er-PEE-er, {{IPA|,ɒn ə ,mæt ə 'piː ə}}.
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[[Etymology|'''Etymological note''']]: The word '''onomatopoeia''' came into English through
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[[Late Latin]] from the ancient [[Greek]]. It is a [[transliteration]] of the [[Greek]] όνοματοποιία (''onomatopoeia''), which is a compound of the [[noun]]  ὄνομα (''onoma'', ‘name’, ‘word’) and the [[verb]] ποιεῖν (''poiein'', ‘to do’, ‘to make’) and was used, like its English descendant, to mean ‘the coining of a word in imitation of a sound’.
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[[category:Figures of sound patterning]] [[category:Figures of Speech course]] [[category:Figures]]
 
[[category:Figures of sound patterning]] [[category:Figures of Speech course]] [[category:Figures]]

Latest revision as of 10:48, 13 June 2019

Onomatopoeia (adjective onomatopoeic) is a figure of speech which uses words to imitate the sounds they are describing. Words like 'Boom!' and 'Crash' are everyday examples, as is the child's word for an ambulance, 'Nee-naw', trying to imitate the sound of its siren. Advertisers often appeal to onomatopoeia: "Snap, crackle, pop" is a slogan based on the sound of a cereal reacting to milk. Comic strips and graphic novels often invent new words to communicate the sounds of their scenes, often the violent sounds: 'Ker-pow!' and 'Zap' are examples.

Poets often use onomatopoeia.

The quotation given for alliteration, "the stuttering rifles' rapid rattle", followed by "the monstrous anger of the guns", is an example of more than alliteration: it is also an example of Owen trying to say what a battlefield of the First World War sounded like; in AWE's view, he is remarkably successful in distinguishing between the deep, dull boom of heavy artillery ("monstrous anger of the guns") and the crisper, sharper crackling of the ordinary soldiers' rifles. Onomatopoeia is often reinforced by alliteration.

Note on pronunciation: Onomatopoeia is pronounced as six syllables with the stress on the penultimate syllable: on-er-mat-er-PEE-er, IPA: /,ɒn ə ,mæt ə 'piː ə/.

Etymological note: The word onomatopoeia came into English through Late Latin from the ancient Greek. It is a transliteration of the Greek όνοματοποιία (onomatopoeia), which is a compound of the noun ὄνομα (onoma, ‘name’, ‘word’) and the verb ποιεῖν (poiein, ‘to do’, ‘to make’) and was used, like its English descendant, to mean ‘the coining of a word in imitation of a sound’.