Definify.com
Webster 1913 Edition
Antiptosis
‖
Anˊtip-to′sis
,Noun.
[L., fr. Gr. [GREEK];
ἀντί
against + [GREEK] a falling, a case, [GREEK] to fall.] (Gram.)
The putting of one case for another.
Webster 1828 Edition
Antiptosis
ANTIP'TOSIS
,Noun.
In grammar, the putting of one case for another.
Definition 2024
antiptosis
antiptosis
English
Examples (grammar, rhetoric) |
---|
But who packs ‛em into the park? Mr. Rickey? No, me and Paul. |
Noun
antiptosis (countable and uncountable, plural antiptoses)
- (grammar, rhetoric) Substitution of one grammatical case for another.
- 1997 April, John Rauk, “The Vocative of Deus and Its Problems” in Classical Philology, volume XCII, № 2, page 143:
- As a vocative form, deus is a clear violation of established norms. The grammarians occasionally encountered apparent examples of such vocatives in the texts they taught, and they explained them either by invoking the figure of antiptosis, in which the “correct” case is replaced by another, or by appeal to the concept of euphonia.
- For more examples of usage of this term, see Citations:antiptosis.
- 1997 April, John Rauk, “The Vocative of Deus and Its Problems” in Classical Philology, volume XCII, № 2, page 143: