Elisabeth, too old to be true
foie:
Foie 2021 — photo is of gaby herstik
Posted on 19 November, 2021Reblogged from seele-brennt
Posted on 24 January, 2020Reblogged from emmy4keri
if you see me wandering the windswept moors and highlands in nothing but a nightgown plastered to my skin with rain, wailing and wringing my hands as i stumble over the already mud-trodden hem, i ask that you do NOT approach. i will be FINE. i just need to work through some stuff & be dramatic first. please respect that.
Posted on 22 March, 2019Reblogged from kxowledge
Once you stop trying to entertain this imaginary audience and start living for yourself things should get a bit better
Tagged #nota bene Posted on 8 December, 2018Reblogged from kxowledge
Posted on 8 December, 2018Reblogged from kxowledge
Posted on 19 November, 2018Reblogged from bob-belcher
Posted on 11 November, 2018Reblogged from popcornpart
Posted on 2 November, 2018Reblogged from memoryslandscape-deactivated202
- Adianoeta: A word or phrase that has both a clear meaning and a second, more subtle meaning
Ex. I go with your heart (I am giving you my love, or maybe I am stealing your affection, taking it away with me).
- Adynaton: A declaration of impossibility through exaggerated comparison
Ex. You’ve got as much chance with her as I have of becoming president.
- Autoclesis: The introduction of a topic by refusing to talk about it
Ex. Don’t ask me about what happened today!
- Chiasmus: A reversal of the meaning of words in consecutive phrase
Ex. I thought you good, originally, but your originality is not that good.- Dvstmesis: The insertion of one word into the middle of another word
Ex. Fan-bloody-tastic!- Epanorthosis: A mid-sentence correction of what has just been said
Ex. I have had two…no, that’s three…heart attacks.- Malaphor: A mixture of two idioms
Ex. I’ll burn that bridge when I get to it (I’ll cross that bridge when I get to it//Don’t burn your bridges).
Ex. You hit the nail right on the nose. (You hit the nail right on the head//That’s right on the nose).- Merism: Referencing something by listing its parts or by using multiple descriptors
Ex. Flesh and bone (the body).
Ex. Search every nook and cranny (look everywhere).- Paradiastole: The conversion of a vice into a virtue
Ex. Yes, I know it does not work all the time, but that is what makes it interesting.- Paraprosdokian: The use of words at the end of a sentence that changes the apparent initial meaning
Ex. Take my hand, I don’t want it.
Ex. Time flies like an arrow; fruit flies like a banana.- Periphrasis: Talking around a subject (circumlocution)
Ex. When I am with you, my toes tingle and my knees are weak. The world is a better place altogether and I find myself giving my fortune to beggars, and I am a beggar before you, craving a smile, a whim (I love you).- Ploce: Moving between specific and general meanings of a word
Ex. He is more English than the English.
Ex. That is a very dog-like dog.- Symploce: Using the same words at the start and end of successive sentences
Ex. If they argue, we will resist. If they fight, we will resist. If they invade, we will resist.- Zeugma: A figure of speech in which a word applies to two others in different senses or to two others of which it semantically suits only one
Ex. John and his license expired last week.
Ex. With weeping eyes and hearts.
Posted on 10 September, 2018Reblogged from s-the-dragon
Posted on 14 July, 2018Reblogged from burzumss
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