Word of the Day
for Monday,
October 8, 2012
Apophasis \uh-POF-uh-sis\, noun:
Denial of one's intention to speak of a subject that is at the
same time named or insinuated, as “I shall not mention Caesar's avarice, nor
his cunning, nor his morality.”
But I think that
anything that is deep isn't love, it's deliberate calculation or schizophrenia.
I myself wouldn't even attempt to say what love is - probably both love and God
can only be defined by apophasis,
through those things that they are not.
-- Viktor Pelevin, The Sacred Book of the Werewolf
-- Viktor Pelevin, The Sacred Book of the Werewolf
"…Now, I have no
desire to be a backseat driver—” Apophasis,
Chris thought; saying you're not going to say something in order to say it.
Nixon's favorite device, and Newt Gingrich's, and Karl Rove's—fine old
Republican tradition.
-- John Barnes, Directive 51
-- John Barnes, Directive 51
Apophasis stems from the Greek word apĆ³pha meaning "to say
no, deny." The suffix -sis appears in Greek loanwords, where it
forms an abstract noun from a verb, as in thesis.
Thanks to: www.dictionary.com
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