In rhetoric, antonomasia is a kind of metonymy in which an epithet or phrase takes the place of a proper name, such as "the little corporal" for Napoleon I, or conversely the use of a proper name as an archetypal name, to express a generic idea. 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.
Stylistically, such epithets may be used for elegant variation to reduce repetition of names in phrases. The word comes from the Greek , antonomasia, itself from the verb , antonomazein 'to name differently'.
Antonomasia can also refer to the transformation of a proper name into a common name, carrying certain defining traits. For example, describing someone as an Apollo instead of as a handsome young man.
Archetypal names
The opposite of antonomasia is an archetypal name. One common example in French is the word for fox: the Latin-derived was replaced by , from Renart, the fox hero of the Roman de Renart (originally the German Reinhard).
Examples
Persons
Fictional characters
Works of art
Places
- "The Athens of America" for Boston
- "Auld Reekie" for Edinburgh
- "The Big Apple" for New York City
- "The Big Easy" for New Orleans
- "The City by the Bay" for San Francisco
- "The City of Brotherly Love" for Philadelphia
- "The City of Dreams" for Mumbai
- "The City of a Hundred Gates" for ancient Thebes, Egypt
- "The City of Kings" for Lima, Peru
- "The City of Lights" for Paris
- "The City of Palaces" for Mexico City
- "The City of the World's Desire" for Constantinople
- "The Eternal City," "Urbe," or "Caput mundi" for Rome
- "La Dominante," "La Serenissima," "Queen of the Adriatic," "City of Water," "City of Masks," "City of Bridges," "The Floating City," and "City of Canals" for Venice
- "La La Land" for Los Angeles
- "The Maiden City" For Derry
- "The Red Stick" for Baton Rouge
- "The Smoke" for London
- "The South American Athens" for Bogotá
- "The Square Mile" for The City of London
- "The Windy City" for Chicago
- "The Emerald City" for Seattle
- "" (Florence of the Elbe) for Dresden
- "The Paris of the Tropics" for Manaus
See also
References
External links