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Mar 29, 2005
This week's themeWords about wordplay This week's words antanaclasis paralipsis antiphrasis oxymoron esprit d'escalier the book "Delightful." -The New York Times Buy it now Discuss Feedback RSS/XML A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Gargparalipsis
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
noun: Drawing attention to something while claiming to be passing over it.
ETYMOLOGY:
From Latin paralipsis, from Greek paraleipsis (an omission), from
paraleipein (to leave on one side), from para- (side) + leipein
(to leave). First recorded use: 1550.
NOTES:
Paralipsis is especially handy in politics to point out an opponent's
faults. It typically involves these phrases: "not to mention" "to say nothing of" "I won't speak of" "leaving aside" USAGE:
"Political correctness has breathed new life into the paralepsis, the
rhetorical device whereby we make a statement by first announcing that
we are not going to make it. When pundits write 'No one is suggesting...'
the American eye reads 'I'm suggesting.'" Florence King; If 'Words Mean Things', Then All is Lost; Times-Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia); Feb 19, 1995. See more usage examples of paralipsis in Vocabulary.com's dictionary. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
When one has been threatened with a great injustice, one accepts a smaller as a favour. -Jane Welsh Carlyle, letter writer (1801-1866)
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