English Dictionary

TROPE

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 Dictionary entry overview: What does trope mean? 

TROPE (noun)
  The noun TROPE has 1 sense:

1. language used in a figurative or nonliteral senseplay

  Familiarity information: TROPE used as a noun is very rare.


 Dictionary entry details 


TROPE (noun)


Sense 1

Meaning:

Language used in a figurative or nonliteral sense

Classified under:

Nouns denoting communicative processes and contents

Synonyms:

figure; figure of speech; image; trope

Hypernyms ("trope" is a kind of...):

rhetorical device (a use of language that creates a literary effect (but often without regard for literal significance))

Domain member usage:

rainy day (a (future) time of financial need)

domino effect (the consequence of one event setting off a chain of similar events (like a falling domino causing a whole row of upended dominos to fall))

flip side (a different aspect of something (especially the opposite aspect))

period (the end or completion of something)

summer (the period of finest development, happiness, or beauty)

dawn (an opening time period)

evening (a later concluding time period)

cakewalk (an easy accomplishment)

lens ((metaphor) a channel through which something can be seen or understood)

helm ((figurative) a position of leadership)

goldbrick (anything that is supposed to be valuable but turns out to be worthless)

housecleaning ((figurative) the act of reforming by the removal of unwanted personnel or practices or conditions)

bell ringer; bull's eye; home run; mark (something that exactly succeeds in achieving its goal)

sleeper (an unexpected hit)

blockbuster; megahit; smash hit (an unusually successful hit with widespread popularity and huge sales (especially a movie or play or recording or novel))

blind alley ((figurative) a course of action that is unproductive and offers no hope of improvement)

Hyponyms (each of the following is a kind of "trope"):

conceit (an elaborate poetic image or a far-fetched comparison of very dissimilar things)

irony (a trope that involves incongruity between what is expected and what occurs)

exaggeration; hyperbole (extravagant exaggeration)

kenning (conventional metaphoric name for something, used especially in Old English and Old Norse poetry)

metaphor (a figure of speech in which an expression is used to refer to something that it does not literally denote in order to suggest a similarity)

metonymy (substituting the name of an attribute or feature for the name of the thing itself (as in 'they counted heads'))

oxymoron (conjoining contradictory terms (as in 'deafening silence'))

personification; prosopopoeia (representing an abstract quality or idea as a person or creature)

simile (a figure of speech that expresses a resemblance between things of different kinds (usually formed with 'like' or 'as'))

synecdoche (substituting a more inclusive term for a less inclusive one or vice versa)

zeugma (use of a verb with two or more complements, playing on the verb's polysemy, for humorous effect)

Derivation:

tropical (characterized by or of the nature of a trope or tropes; changed from its literal sense)


 Context examples 


The bitter check had wrung from me some tears; and now, as I sat poring over the crabbed characters and flourishing tropes of an Indian scribe, my eyes filled again.

(Jane Eyre, by Charlotte Brontë)



 Learn English with... Proverbs 
"Wide ears and short tongue are the best." (English proverb)

"A rocky vineyard does not need a prayer, but a pick ax." (Native American proverb, Navajo)

"When what you want doesn't happen, learn to want what does." (Arabic proverb)

"Have no respect at table and in bed." (Corsican proverb)



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