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Efficient Appearance, Sound, and Meaning
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Efficient Appearance, Sound, and Meaning. Words have three levels to them and are selected for their efficiency in these three areas: ◦ Appearance ◦

Dec 18, 2015

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Martin Bryant
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Page 1: Efficient Appearance, Sound, and Meaning.  Words have three levels to them and are selected for their efficiency in these three areas: ◦ Appearance ◦

Efficient Appearance, Sound, and Meaning

Page 2: Efficient Appearance, Sound, and Meaning.  Words have three levels to them and are selected for their efficiency in these three areas: ◦ Appearance ◦

Words have three levels to them and are selected for their efficiency in these three areas:

◦ Appearance

◦ Sound

◦ Meaning

Page 3: Efficient Appearance, Sound, and Meaning.  Words have three levels to them and are selected for their efficiency in these three areas: ◦ Appearance ◦

Mono-syllabic: one syllable◦ Ex: Sad

Poly-syllabic: multi-syllable◦ Ex. Disconsolate, Despondent

The higher the ratio of poly-syllabic words, the more sophisticated and complex the sentence.

Page 4: Efficient Appearance, Sound, and Meaning.  Words have three levels to them and are selected for their efficiency in these three areas: ◦ Appearance ◦

Flesch-Kincaid reading level calculation:

1. Select a few paragraphs to use as your base

2. Calculate the average number of words per sentence. Multiply the result by 0.39

3. Calculate the average number of syllables in words (count and divide). Multiply the result by 11.8

4. Add the two results together, and subtract 15.59

The result will be a number that equates to a grade level. For example, a 6.5 is a sixth grade reading level result.

Page 5: Efficient Appearance, Sound, and Meaning.  Words have three levels to them and are selected for their efficiency in these three areas: ◦ Appearance ◦

Euphonious: pleasant sounding◦ Ex: pillow, ocean, mayonnaise

Cacophonous: harsh sounding◦ Ex: awkward, vomit, crash

Page 6: Efficient Appearance, Sound, and Meaning.  Words have three levels to them and are selected for their efficiency in these three areas: ◦ Appearance ◦

Denotative: exact meaning◦ Ex: Dress, obese

Connotative: suggested, emotional meaning (+, -)◦ Ex: Gown, plump

Page 7: Efficient Appearance, Sound, and Meaning.  Words have three levels to them and are selected for their efficiency in these three areas: ◦ Appearance ◦

Objective: impersonal, unemotional◦ Ex: The rat acquired the cheese.

Subjective: personal, emotional◦ Ex: The foul, disease-ridden beast pilfered my

best Gouda from right under my nose!

Page 8: Efficient Appearance, Sound, and Meaning.  Words have three levels to them and are selected for their efficiency in these three areas: ◦ Appearance ◦

Active: states action◦ Ex: The students made progress.

Passive: states being◦ Ex: Progress was made by the students.

Passive voice is used when an author wants to remain vague or conceal info.

(An author uses passive voice to remain vague or conceal info.)

Page 9: Efficient Appearance, Sound, and Meaning.  Words have three levels to them and are selected for their efficiency in these three areas: ◦ Appearance ◦

Concrete: specific, tangible◦ Ex: Girl, flag

Abstract: conceptual, not quantifiable◦ Ex: Beauty, patriotism

Concrete details usually provide support, while abstract details fill in meaning.

Page 10: Efficient Appearance, Sound, and Meaning.  Words have three levels to them and are selected for their efficiency in these three areas: ◦ Appearance ◦

Hyperbole: deliberate exaggeration of facts◦ Ex: “The shot heard round the world”

Understatement (Litote): deliberate misrepresenting as less◦ Ex: “I was only doing my job” (after saving the

President’s life)

Page 11: Efficient Appearance, Sound, and Meaning.  Words have three levels to them and are selected for their efficiency in these three areas: ◦ Appearance ◦

Pedestrian: plain, layman’s terms◦ Ex: Hand me that cookie.

Pedantic: boorish, inflated language attempting to display importance for learning’s sake◦ Ex: Relinquish unto me the floury morsel in your

possession.

Page 12: Efficient Appearance, Sound, and Meaning.  Words have three levels to them and are selected for their efficiency in these three areas: ◦ Appearance ◦

Didactic: has an instructive purpose/tone; often associated with a dry, pompous presentation◦ Ex: Most high school lectures

Page 13: Efficient Appearance, Sound, and Meaning.  Words have three levels to them and are selected for their efficiency in these three areas: ◦ Appearance ◦

Vulgarity: language deficient in taste and refinement; course, base◦ Ex: @##!, !!%%^@#, and &$%^#

Slang: vernacular speech, sometimes humorous, exaggerated, or shortened for effect◦ Ex: chick, dude, da bomb

Page 14: Efficient Appearance, Sound, and Meaning.  Words have three levels to them and are selected for their efficiency in these three areas: ◦ Appearance ◦

Colloquial: regional, provincial; differs from formal language in connotation, pronunciation, usage; accepted in informal conversation◦ Ex: Ya’ll, You guys◦ Ex: Fixin’ to◦ Ex: Ain’t

Jargon: specialized or technical language specific to a profession or field of study◦ Ex: Chip, bite, byte, CPU, zip = computer field

Page 15: Efficient Appearance, Sound, and Meaning.  Words have three levels to them and are selected for their efficiency in these three areas: ◦ Appearance ◦

Cliché: language used so often it has lost its freshness and clarity (fig. lang. without the freshness)

◦ Ex: As easy as pie ◦ Ex: Raining cats and dogs◦ Ex: There’s no place like home

Page 16: Efficient Appearance, Sound, and Meaning.  Words have three levels to them and are selected for their efficiency in these three areas: ◦ Appearance ◦

Assonance: repetition of similar vowel sounds in closely associated words (half-rhyme)

◦ No pain, no gain.

Page 17: Efficient Appearance, Sound, and Meaning.  Words have three levels to them and are selected for their efficiency in these three areas: ◦ Appearance ◦

Consonance: repetition of similar consonant sound in closely associated words

◦ Each slow dusk is a drawing down of blinds.

Page 18: Efficient Appearance, Sound, and Meaning.  Words have three levels to them and are selected for their efficiency in these three areas: ◦ Appearance ◦

Alliteration: repetition of initial consonant sound in closely associated words

◦ The twisting trout twinkled below.

Page 19: Efficient Appearance, Sound, and Meaning.  Words have three levels to them and are selected for their efficiency in these three areas: ◦ Appearance ◦

Onomatopoeia: words whose pronunciation suggests meaning (sound words)

◦ Buzz, sizzle, hiss

Page 20: Efficient Appearance, Sound, and Meaning.  Words have three levels to them and are selected for their efficiency in these three areas: ◦ Appearance ◦

Never are you allowed to say that “the author uses a lot of diction.”

Whenever the word “diction” is used, it must be accompanied by an adjective to describe what kind of diction.