antonomasia การใช้
- By antonomasia, the namesake came to define hazelnuts in general.
- However, the term " duce " survives as an antonomasia for Benito Mussolini.
- By coincidence, in various books this character was identified with the simple antonomasia the old man.
- It is likely that antonomasia by which the Carabinieri will continue to be referred will remain the " Arma ".
- An opposite substitution of a proper name for some generic term is also sometimes called " antonomasia ", as a Cicero for an orator.
- A frequent instance of antonomasia in the Late Middle Ages and early Renaissance was the use of the term " the Philosopher " to refer to Aristotle.
- Especially outside Naples, Merola is by far the best known representative of the sceneggiata genre and he is often mentioned to refer to sceneggiata through antonomasia.
- This inn was so well known that the word " rebecchino " ( also spelled " rebechino " ) eventually came to mean " cheap hotel " per antonomasia.
- The Greek term antonomasia, in rhetoric, means substituting any epithet or phrase for a proper name, as " Pelides ", signifying the " son of Peleus ", to identify Achilles.
- A more recent example of the other form of antonomasia ( usage of archetypes ) was the use of " Solons " for " the legislators " in 1930s journalism, after the semi-legendary Solon, lawgiver of Athens.
- This equation between the Milanese language ( and people ) and sincerity is clearly embodied in the " commedia " character of Meneghino, which is supposedly Maggi's creation, and was later developed by other authors ( most notably Carlo Porta ) to eventually become a prominent symbol of Milan and the Milanese for antonomasia.
- Despite being used for decades as the iconic duckbill dinosaur per antonomasia the material it is based on is composed of teeth from both duckbills and ceratopsids ( their teeth have a distinctive double root ), and its describer, Joseph Leidy, came to recognize the difference and suggested limiting the genus to what would now be seen as ceratopsid teeth.