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onomatopoesy. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
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English
Etymology
From Ancient Greek ὀνοματοποιία (onomatopoiía, “the coining of a word in imitation of a sound”).
Noun
onomatopoesy (countable and uncountable, plural onomatopoesies)
- The use of onomatopoeia.
1892, Leonard Landois, William Stirling, A Text-book of Human Physiology, page 664:Another means is the imitation of sounds by the organ of speech, constituting onomatopoesy , e.g., the hissing of a stream, the roll of thunder, the tumult of a storm, whistling, etc.
1893 July, Professor Sully, “A New Book on Infant Psychology”, in Journal of Education, volume 15, number 288, page 387:It is to be remembered, too, in saying that the child imitates such familiar onomatopoesies as “bow-wow” (French “oua-oua.”), “tic-tic” (French “tic-tac”) from the nurse, that the nursery tradition of employing these sounds is probably the result of a respectful attention to the spontaneous namings of earlier generations of babies.
1963, Ernest J. Moyne, Hiawatha and Kalevala:Because of this difference the onomatopoesy of the original has been lost and also some of the alliterative quality of Finnish poetry.
1968, Yorick Blumenfeld, Seesaw: Cultural Life in Eastern Europe, page 109:Even Hoxha's wife, Nexhmije (whose name is genuine onomatopoesy) , contributes by attacking the parasitic, opportunistic tendencies of Albanian youth.
2004, Frederick Millet Salter, H. V. Weekes, The Art of Writing, page 114:A little child is not content to call a cow, a cow; it is a moo-cow, and a dog is a bow-wow; but if onomatopoesy is a child-like quality, then our language itself is the kingdom of children.