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#192549 08/16/2010 2:26 AM
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I had heard of a term once for splitting two words by inserting another word into the "break" -- like saying:

No - flipping - way?!

or too - flipping - bad!

What is the term for this technique?

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Chuck Billow

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tmesis is the Grammatical and Rhetorical term. unfreakingbelievable.

tsuwm #192559 08/16/2010 3:34 AM
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toobloodyright

olly #192562 08/16/2010 3:54 AM
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I think I put my "thanks" in the wrong place, so...

Thanks.

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Chuck

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I was wondering.

Faldage #192593 08/17/2010 1:21 AM
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Thanks

Avy #192602 08/17/2010 3:06 AM
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Is there such a thing as "diacope" that means the same thing? I've heard it called that, as well as tmesis. It's quite common in the military milieu in which I work: two G-rated syllables never seem to suffice.


"I don't know which is worse: ignorance or apathy. And, frankly, I don't care." - Anonymous
beck123 #192606 08/17/2010 4:31 AM
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if you look at Silva Rhetoricae, it gives diacope as a related figure for tmesis; but the descriptions seem far apart. I guess they both qualify under the general category Amplification.

tsuwm #192607 08/17/2010 4:49 AM
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Diacope has the same sense of "putting something in the middle of something else," but it's different. Thanks - tmesis is what I hear at work all the time.


"I don't know which is worse: ignorance or apathy. And, frankly, I don't care." - Anonymous
beck123 #192615 08/17/2010 11:04 AM
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The express path to diacope.

Faldage #192628 08/17/2010 2:54 PM
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I knew syncope was a fainting spell due to deficient supply of blood to the brain. I find it also has a meaning opposite to that of Tmesis - as in Worcester.


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