[tlhIngan Hol] Metaphor and Metonymy
SuStel
sustel at trimboli.name
Wed Jun 17 07:19:31 PDT 2020
On 6/17/2020 9:43 AM, Lieven L. Litaer wrote:
>
>> *Soj* /food/ is not an element of a matter or affair that can be used to
>> name a matter or affair, so it's not a metonym.
>
> Thanks. I'll mark it as such. So it's a metaphor?
Maybe. A metaphor is a word (or phrase) that is used in place of another
word (or phrase), and which shares some common characteristics with the
other word, but which is unrelated to that word. I can imagine *Soj*
/food/ being a metaphor for /matter, affair, concern/ in that food is
often a central affair in life. On the other hand, I can also imagine
food being considered a major part of many events that might deal with
important matters, making *Soj* a metonym. Neither interpretation seems
convincing to me.
>
>>> 3. Some idioms consist of only a noun phrase, like {naH jajmey}.
>>> Wouldn't that also be a metonymy?
>>
>> That's not a metonym either.
>
> So also a metaphor?
Yes, and the imagery is explained to us.
The phrase “vegetable days” (or “fruit days,” since *naH *means both
“vegetable” and “fruit”) refers to one’s youth, a time before
reaching an age considered appropriate for marriage. The imagery is
of a plant, rooted but growing, just as a Klingon youth still needs
grounding (the home) for nourishment (teaching) in order to grow
spiritually. [KGT]
The characteristic of being tied to a place for some kind of growth is
common to both rooted plants and one's youth, but otherwise the two
phrases are unrelated. That's the very definition of a metaphor.
I don't think it's an especially useful endeavor to label which words
have been used metaphorically in Klingon. Idioms need explanation
because the meanings of idioms can't be deduced without an external
explanation, but metaphors can be understood just by recognizing the
characteristics involved. If you label *naH jajmey* as a metaphor, what
use is that to the reader?
Understanding metaphor can be useful in many areas, like poetry,
storytelling, and speech-writing. But to classify words and phrases as
metaphors does not, I think, add any meaningful grammatical information.
A metaphor arises in how you use a phrase, not in its mere existence.
--
SuStel
http://trimboli.name
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