Synchysis - Wikipedia Synchysis is a rhetorical technique wherein words are intentionally scattered to create bewilderment, or for some other purpose [1][2] By disrupting the normal course of a sentence, it forces the audience to consider the meaning of the words and the relationship between them
What Is Synchysis? (with picture) - Language Humanities Synchysis is a poetic device frequently used by Latin writers to force the reader to concentrate on the meaning of the words by confusing their order Usually, synchysis involves alternating the words in two phrases so that the modifiers are separated from their subjects
Synchysis Scintillans - EyeWiki Similar to asteroid hyalosis, synchysis scintillans is an ocular condition where there is accumulation of cholesterol crystals in the vitreous humor of the eye
The Ultimate Guide to Understanding Synchysis Synchysis, a term derived from the Greek word meaning "confusion" or "intertwining," refers to a complex literary device that involves the intermixing or transposition of words or phrases to create a unique syntactical structure
synchysis - Wiktionary, the free dictionary synchysis (countable and uncountable, plural synchyses) (poetry) A complicated, interlocking word-order pattern in early Latin verse, demonstrated by Virgil and his contemporaries
Synchysis In Writing: Purpose Examples - Filmmaking Lifestyle Synchysis is a fascinating literary and rhetorical device often employed in both writing and filmmaking At its core, synchysis is the intentional scrambling of the typical word order in a sentence
Synchysis - Academic Dictionaries and Encyclopedias Synchysis is an interlocked word order, in the form A - B - A - B; which often display change and difference This poetry form was a favorite with Latin poets
synchysis - BYU Humanities The confused arrangement of words in a sentence; hyperbaton or anastrophe taken to an obscuring extreme, either accidentally or purposefully This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3 0 License