Hendiadys (/hɛnˈdaɪ.ədɪs/) is a figure of speech used for emphasis—"The substitution of a conjunction for a subordination". The basic idea is to use two words linked by the conjunction "and" instead of the one modifying the other. English names for hendiadys include two for one and figure of twins. Although the underlying phrase is Greek: ἓν διὰ δυοῖν, romanized: hen dia duoin, lit. 'one through two', the only other forms occasionally found in English are '''hendiaduo''' and '''hendiaduous''', the latter of which the 17th-century English Biblical commentator Matthew Poole used in his commentary on Genesis 3:16, Proverbs 1:6, and Isaiah 19:20.[1]
^Matthew Poole's Commentaries on Genesis 3, Proverbs 1, and Isaiah 19, accessed 14 November 2015
compound, hendiadys, ...or a hyponym compound to express a higher concept... Look up hendiadys in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Hendiadys is different...
little more than kin, and less than kind." An unusual rhetorical device, hendiadys, appears in several places in the play. Examples are found in Ophelia's...
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writers, such as John Kitto, have noted that this could be taken as a hendiadys, the Spirit as fire, or as pointing out two distinct baptisms - one by...
that refers only to a figurative sense of a lock or stock or barrel. See hendiadys and hendiatris. In this position their teacher would be analysed variously...
Two for one or 2 for 1 may refer to: Hendiadys, or "two for one", a figure of speech "Buy one, get one free", or "two for one", a type of sales promotion...
by the infinitive "to get". Use of a catenative verb can be masked by hendiadys, in which the two parts are joined by an and, as in come and get it rather...
Epizeuxis: repetition of a single word, with no other intervening words. Hendiadys: use of two nouns to express an idea when it normally would consist of...
rhyme. fiction figurative language figure of speech figure of twins See hendiadys. fin de siècle flashback An interjected scene that takes the narrative...
clandestine actions were often never heard from again. The alliterative hendiadys Nacht und Nebel (German for "Night and Fog") is documented in German since...
blow War, Pestilence, Famine, Death Anastrophe Collocation Fossil word Hendiadys Hendiatris Isocolon Meme Merism Phraseme Set phrase Trope Word order Adjective...
Life, Freedom" Rule of three (writing) The three Rs Four-character idiom Hendiadys, one through two has one of the parts subordinate to the other Tricolon...
zero-related (identical) to the names of dances. Antanaclasis Figura etymologica Hendiadys Legal doublet Merism Pleonasm (the use of more words than necessary to...
close to each other.[clarification needed] Antanaclasis Cognate object Hendiadys Legal doublet Merism Pleonasm (the use of more words than necessary to...
its use of figurative language and for its ability to evoke emotion. Hendiadys – using two nouns linked by a conjunction to express a single complex...
and favor the next process. A hendiadys is a phrase that contains two complementary words, and a gender-neutral hendiadys will include a feminine word...
with the principle of 'doubleness' or 'interplay' because this type of hendiadys dialogue is essential to the very structure of consciousness, awareness...
the genitive case. This form of antiptosis is related to the technique hendiadys; it is more or less the opposite of it. It is also related to the technique...
force for both life and destruction) into a single symbol of war. Dvandva Hendiadys Kenning Merism Parallelism (grammar) Hull (2003, p.137). See Hull (2003...