Zeugmata
Appearance
A zeugma is a figure of speech when a single word is used in two parts of a sentence, but must be understood differently in relation to each.
Examples
[edit]English
[edit]- Ask a medieval peasant where America was and you'd get a blank look. Or, worse still, the plague.
- Philomena Cunk (played by Diane Morgan) in "The Renaissance Will Not Be Televised" (S1:E3 of "Cunk on Earth")
- We must, indeed, all hang together, or most assuredly we shall all hang separately.
- Benjamin Franklin in a letter to Thomas Jefferson
- My blood sugar fell dramatically and so did I.
- Elaine Stritch in "Elaine Stritch at Liberty"
- It's like an episode of "Yes, Prime Minister" with no Sir Humphrey, no Sir Bernard and no laughter.
- Stephen Parkinson, Baron Parkinson of Whitley Bay, speaking at the Cambridge Union after the resignation of Simon Case and Sue Gray
- The iconoclast Henry Sherfield in 1630 broke not only a window depicting God the Father in St Edmund's, Salisbury, but also his own leg while standing on a pew to do it.
- Keith Thomas in "Religion and the Decline of Magic" (p. 113)
- Lord Cameron of Chipping Norton takes the oath and his seat in the Upper House after his bombshell return as Foreign Secretary in the reshuffle.
- James Tapsfield in the Daily Mail
- When all the clowns that you have commissioned have died in battle or in vain.
- Bob Dylan in Queen Jane Approximately
- [Ed Davey should] clear his diary, clear his desk, and clear off.
- He himself fled back to France, alcoholism, tawdry affairs and disillusionment.
- Linda Colley in "Britons"
- ...was crucified, dead and buried...
- Apostles' Creed
- History is now and England.
- T. S. Eliot in "Little Gidding"
- A good sermon should be about God and about eight minutes long.
- He left the room with neither his hat nor his dignity.
- She made no reply, up her mind, and a dash for the door.
- The arms race was finished by the Dreadnought and by 1914.
- You may leave with an improved knowledge of coastal defences and an ice cream.
- You leave with my best wishes and a fine collection of zeugmata.
Latin
[edit]- They tear your possessions to pieces, and my heart.
- Ovid in "The Heroides" (I.90)
- deposito pariter cum veste timore
- Ovid in "The Heroides" (XVIII.57)
- onerat Seianum, saevitiam, superbiam, spes eius
- Tacitus in "Annals" (IV)