Diaeresis

Diaeresis [ diɛre zə ː ] or diaeresis [ diɛ rezɪs ː ] (also dihairese or dihairesis, from Greek διαίρεσις dihairesis, separation ', Latin diaeresis ) referred to:

  • In phonetics and phonology, the separate pronunciation of two consecutive vowels, see diaeresis (phonetics )
  • In the form of a prosody caesura, an incision in verse The end of the colon ( a syntactic unit ) or a word here coincides with the end of Versfußes ( rhythmic or metric units). Example: " You see, where do you see / just vanity on earth. " (Andreas Gryphius ); sometimes a so-called uplift impact. see dihairesis
  • In rhetoric, the intentional misappropriation or insertion of phonetic Dihairesen contrary to the language conventions a case of Metaplasmus dar.
  • In the philosophy of a method for analysis of a term by its features, see Dihairesis
  • In zoology a seam or groove that divides the uropods of crustaceans, see Uropode

See also:

  • Disambiguation
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