The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #138083   Message #3160251
Posted By: GUEST,Alan Whittle
25-May-11 - 07:17 AM
Thread Name: BS: George Davis is innocent
Subject: RE: BS: George Davis is innocent
Just so we all know why innocent is a considerable catachresis. (I bet you're a bugger at Scrabble, Mike!)

Catachresis (from Greek êáôÜ÷ñçóéò, "abuse") is "misapplication of a word, especially in a mixed metaphor" according to the Penguin Dictionary of Literary Terms and Literary Theory. Another meaning is to use an existing word to denote something that has no name in the current language.[1] Catachresis is a very common habit, and can have both positive and negative effects on language: on the one hand, it helps a language evolve and overcome poverty of expression; on the other, it can lead to miscommunications or make the language of one era incompatible with that of another.[original research?] Catachresis is more a linguistic phenomenon than a figure of speech.

Common forms of catachresis are:

Using a word in a sense radically different from its normal sense.
"'Tis deepest winter in Lord Timon's purse" — Shakespeare, Timon of Athens
Using a word to denote something for which, without the catachresis, there is no actual name.
"a table's leg"
Using a word out of context.
"Can't you hear that? Are you blind?"
Using paradoxes or contradictions.
"Darkness visible" — John Milton, Paradise Lost
Creating an illogical mixed metaphor.
"To take arms against a sea of troubles..." – Shakespeare, Hamlet
Misuse of a word out of a misunderstanding of its meaning.
"The runner literally flew down the track."
Catachresis is often used to convey extreme emotion or alienation. It is prominent in baroque literature and, more recently, in dadaist and surrealist literature.

Example from Alexander Pope's Peri Bathous, Or the Art of Sinking in Poetry:

Masters of this [Catachresis] will say,

Mow the beard,
Shave the grass,
Pin the plank,
Nail my sleeve.

From whence results the same kind of pleasure to the mind, as doth to the eye when we behold Harlequin trimming himself with a hatchet, hewing down a tree with a razor, making his tea in a cauldron, and brewing his ale in a teapot, to the incredible satisfaction of the British spectator.[2]