English, asked by pwadkar2306, 3 days ago

a daniel come to judgement write the figure of speech​

Answers

Answered by kashvichaurasia819
0

Answer:

A Daniel come to Judgement figure of speech

A person who is or has been able to wisely resolve a particularly difficult problem or dispute. Coined by Shakespeare in The Merchant of Venice, it alludes to the Biblical character Daniel, who was renowned for having excellent faculties of judgment.

Answered by sangeetha01sl
0

Answer:

The figure of speech of the given phrase​ "a daniel come to judgment" is -

Synecdoche

Explanation:

  • A person who is or has been able to resolve a particularly difficult problem or dispute wisely. Coined by Shakespeare in The Merchant of Venice, it alludes to the biblical character Daniel, who was characterized by excellent judgment.
  • Synecdoche is a type of metonymy or a figure of speech in which a term for a part of something is used to refer to the whole or vice versa . It is a rhetorical trope and a type of metonymy, a manner of speaking that uses a term to designate a thing to refer to a related thing.
  • Synecdoche (and thus metonymy) is distinct from metaphor, although historically it has been considered a subspecies of metaphor, being understood as a kind of conceptual substitution. In Lanham's Handlist of Rhetorical Terms all three terms have somewhat restrictive definitions consistent with their Greek etymologies -
  1. Metaphor - changing a word from its literal meaning to one improperly applied but analogous to it.
  2. Metonymy - substitution of cause for effect, proper noun for one of its properties

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