What's the difference between cade and metonymic?

Cade


Definition:

  • (a.) Bred by hand; domesticated; petted.
  • (v. t.) To bring up or nourish by hand, or with tenderness; to coddle; to tame.
  • (n.) A barrel or cask, as of fish.
  • (n.) A species of juniper (Juniperus Oxycedrus) of Mediterranean countries.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Freshman kicker Cade Foster missed the attempt which fell into the arms of Auburn's Chris Davis who returned it from 109 yards for the game winning touchdown.
  • (2) Brian Cade Cirencester, Gloucestershire • This year Stephen Seddon was convicted of killing his parents in order to inherit their estate ( Report , 29 March), joining a long list of others.
  • (3) This method, first described by Cade, is widely practiced in the United Kingdom and spares many patients who develop early metastases following initial radiotherapy from unnecessary mutilating surgery shortly before inevitable death.
  • (4) While the Edwin Cade hospital in Obuasi saw 6,711 cases of malaria in 2005, the figure was down to 973 by 2009.
  • (5) Ca2+ has been recently reported to be required for high rates of translational initiation in GH3 pituitary cells (Chin, K.-V., Cade, C., Brostrom, C.O., Galuska, E.M., and Brostrom, M.A.
  • (6) Mark Wahlberg, left, as Cade Yeager and Jack Reynor as Shane Dyson in Transformers: Age of Extinction.
  • (7) Since Cade first described the role of lithium in the treatment of manic-depressive patients 40 years ago, there has not been consistent agreement on the relationship between the serum level of lithium during maintenance therapy and clinical outcome.
  • (8) Ca2+ is required for the maintenance of high rates of translational initiation in GH3 pituitary cells (Chin, K.-V., Cade, C., Brostrom, C.O., Galuska, E.M., and Brostrom, M.A.
  • (9) When the campaign bus was a no-show in Los Angeles, reporters and Clinton press staff whipped out cellphones and ordered up an Uber-cade.
  • (10) In the light of recepnt developments, delayed surgery following initial radiation in osteosarcoma, as advocated by Cade in 1947, has now been superseded by immediate amputation.
  • (11) A recent study reported that protein synthesis was inhibited in rat livers perfused with medium containing vasopressin (Chin, K. -V., Cade, C., Brostrom, M. A., and Brostrom, C. O.
  • (12) This result is not in accord with the markedly positive findings of Wagemaker and Cade (1977).
  • (13) Lithium intoxication was not a serious clinical problem until 1949 when Cade introduced his fortuitously effective, but nevertheless high, dosage regimen which was continued until signs of recovery from mania appeared.
  • (14) In 1962 radiotherapy with delayed surgery according to Cade was replacing surgery alone as the adopted treatment programme.
  • (15) Lithium in the form of the carbonate or citrate salts has been used by Cade in 1949 for the treatment of affective disorders.
  • (16) Preparations of coal-tar and juniper tar (cade oil) that are used in the treatment of psoriasis are known to contain numerous potentially carcinogenic polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH).

Metonymic


Definition:

  • (a.) Alt. of Metonymical

Example Sentences:

  • (1) When grouped into the 6 key words, the opinions uncovered a vast somatic field, confusion couched in metonymic figures of speech, such as using the term "woman" for "mental patient," moral, genital and sexual connotations.
  • (2) That is, through the process of displacement, the phallus also functions as a metonymic symbol.
  • (3) To fully appreciate penis envy, both the metaphoric and metonymic meanings assigned to femininity must be analysed.
  • (4) When disaster occurs in the shape of income-tax demands or illness, it is the "home" that he metonymically laments.
  • (5) Moreover, people understand metaphoric referential descriptions more easily than they do metonymic ones.
  • (6) Subjects were faster at reinstating the antecedents for literal referential descriptions than at reinstating metaphoric and metonymic descriptions.
  • (7) Commissioned by Microsoft billionaire Paul Allen, it was initially a museum devoted to rock music; the bizarre glass strips resting on the roof are, strange to say, a metonym for guitar frets.
  • (8) The comparison revealed such disorders in hebephrenic speech as semantic alteration (metaphorical and metonymic) of the linguistic tropic type and syntax disorders including inhibition of the expansion of phrases introduced by functional monemes (morphemes), whether primary or secondary.
  • (9) People can be referred to metaphorically, as in calling a terrible boxer "a creampuff," or metonymically, as in calling a naval admiral "the brass."
  • (10) The results of three experiments indicated that metaphoric and metonymic referential descriptions reinstate their antecedents in the course of comprehension.
  • (11) Those programmes are the products of hundreds of extraordinary skilled, patient, brave and resourceful professionals – but his name has become a metonym for them, a byword for a certain quality of programming and, it may be suspected, the magic password that allows them to get made.

Words possibly related to "metonymic"