Was the chiasma common in Latin? Or an uncommon figure of speech?
(Words in a sentence with the pattern ABBA or ABBCBBA, etc...)Where could we meet the greatest amount of chiasma? In poetry? In speech? In prose?
How was it used? To put an emphasis or something? What was its role in stylistic?
Which words were more commonly use as the "C" in my AB-C-BA example? A particular type of word?
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Ben Kovitz
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Quidam
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Chiasms are mostly used in poetry and high rhetoric, for dramatic or or playful effect. What they do is emphasise the words that seem inverted, draw the reader or listener's attention. I would say the frequency and effect of chiasms were not so different from how they are used in the modern languages. I think the 'C' in ABCBA could be anything; it depends entirely on the sentence. Typically a word like et. I suspect ABBCBBA would be very rare; you don't happen to have an example available?
Cerberus
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Thank you, it answers the question. – Quidam Nov 03 '19 at 16:39
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1I think C in ABCBA would often be a transitive verb, with nouns before and adjectives after (or vice versa). – C Monsour Nov 04 '19 at 00:23
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Could you had some examples to make your answer perfect? – Quidam Nov 04 '19 at 09:27
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Thank you Monsour. You are free to make it an answer, it's interesting. – Quidam Nov 04 '19 at 09:28
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Isn't the chiasmus much more common and natural in Latin and Ancient Greek than in English? (Or should this be a separate question?) – Ben Kovitz Nov 05 '19 at 22:43
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@BenKovitz: I'm not sure. I feel that it isn't common in either Latin or English, but it's hard for me to judge the relative frequencies. – Cerberus Nov 06 '19 at 13:01
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Isn't the chiasma used by Cesar and Cicero too? – Quidam Nov 28 '19 at 05:04
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1@Quidam: I'm fairly certain that it is! It was a widely known figure of speech. – Cerberus Nov 28 '19 at 13:07