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because the former is a relative term, requiring that a phrase or word is proceeded by something greater in dignity, time, or some other metric, whereas bathos may apply to an entire work, text, or speech, with no major changes in dignity.
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Catacosmesis may also be used for humorous statements due to the juxtaposition of phrases leading to the anticlimax, as in the following statement:
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Here, the verbs "die", "faint", and "fail" are arranged such that the most important of them (die) is first and the least important (fail) last.
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Here, the nouns "God", "country", and "Yale" are ordered so that the most important (God) is first and the least important (Yale) last.
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30:, either in order of importance, dignity or time, and either abrupt or gradual. It is considered to be synonymous with
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42:, wherein a series of clauses has increasing, rather than decreasing, force. Catacosmesis is distinct from
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He has seen the ravages of war, he has known natural catastrophes, he has been to singles bars.
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is the Greek word for "to set in order". In rhetoric, it refers to a
204:"The Garden of Eloquence Scholars' Facsimiles & Reprints, Inc"
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250:"Shelley's "Sometimes Embarrassing Declarations": A Defence"
115:, the opposite device, in which clauses increase in force
290:"Wittgenstein Studies and Contemporary Pyrrhonism"
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191:. Vol. 2 (11th ed.). 1911. p. 123.
26:in which there is a descending order of words or
154:The Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics
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336:Liberman, Myron M.; Foster, Edward E. (1968).
227:. University of California Press. p. 31.
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156:(4th ed.). Princeton University Press.
254:Texas Studies in Literature and Language
202:Peachum, Henry; Crane, Gregory (1977).
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70:Another example of catacosmesis is the
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78:For God, for country, and for Yale.
339:A Modern Lexicon of Literary Terms
34:. The opposite of catacosmesis is
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221:Lanham, Richard A. (1991-01-01).
16:Greek word and rhetorical device
50:An example of catacosmesis is:
342:. Scott, Foresman. p. 85.
224:A Handlist of Rhetorical Terms
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248:DELASANTA, RODNEY (1965).
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188:Encyclopædia Britannica
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38:when used to refer to
62:, The Indian Serenade
260:(2): 173, 174, 176.
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182:"Anticlimax"
360:Figures of speech
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130:Rhetorical Device
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295:Philosophia
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136:References
108:Anticlimax
32:anticlimax
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354:Category
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125:Rhetoric
102:See also
92:—
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113:Auxesis
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36:auxesis
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119:Climax
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