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syllepsis
[si-lep-sis]
noun
Grammar.
plural
syllepsesthe use of a word or expression to perform two syntactic functions, especially to modify two or more words of which at least one does not agree in number, case, or gender, as the use of are in Neither he nor we are willing.
syllepsis
/ sɪˈlɛpsɪs /
noun
(in grammar or rhetoric) the use of a single sentence construction in which a verb, adjective, etc is made to cover two syntactical functions, as the verb form have in she and they have promised to come
another word for zeugma
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Other Word Forms
- sylleptic adjective
- sylleptically adverb
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Word History and Origins
Origin of syllepsis1
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Word History and Origins
Origin of syllepsis1
C16: from Late Latin, from Greek sullēpsis, from sul- syn- + lēpsis a taking, from lambanein to take
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