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parataxis
[par-uh-tak-sis]
noun
the placing together of sentences, clauses, or phrases without a conjunctive word or words, as Hurry up, it is getting late! I came—I saw—I conquered.
parataxis
/ ˌpærəˈtæktɪk, ˌpærəˈtæksɪs /
noun
the juxtaposition of clauses in a sentence without the use of a conjunction, as for example None of my friends stayed — they all left early
Other Word Forms
- paratactically adverb
- paratactic adjective
- paratactical adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of parataxis1
Word History and Origins
Origin of parataxis1
Example Sentences
Others include paving stones, Gascon folk tales, parataxis, punctuation, cognates, medieval architecture and sheepdogs.
Mr. Simon could be dense and even obscure, gilding his essays with discussions of Baudelaire, Nietzsche and Serbian poetry, and with terms such as “tonitruous,” “caducity” and “parataxis.”
But parataxis can be defended on aesthetics alone.
Alter believes in poetic parataxis, not pious parataxis.
He devotes pages and pages to the problems of Hebrew parataxis—its rule of connecting phrases with simple “and”s.
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