Metaplasm

This article is about the grammatical term. For the biological term, see Metaplasia.

A metaplasm[1] is a change in the orthography (and hence phonology) of a word. Originally it referred to techniques used in Ancient Greek and Latin poetry, or processes in those languages' grammar.

Sound change

Many poetic metaplasms are useful for describing processes in the natural development of languages:

Rhetoric

In rhetoric, metaplasm is the modification of word order for emphasis.

Romance languages

In the grammar of the Romance languages, metaplasm refers to the change in the grammatical gender of nouns from their original gender in Latin.

See also

Notes

  1. From Greek μεταπλασμός, from μεταπλάσσειν "mold into a different shape."
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