Mixed Metaphors Quotes

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Mixed Metaphors: Their Use and Abuse Mixed Metaphors: Their Use and Abuse by Karen Sullivan
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“Conceptual metaphors generally ‘outlive’ the specific words and expressions that involve them.”
Karen Sullivan, Mixed Metaphors: Their Use and Abuse
“If we know how metaphors work on a conceptual level, we can control their effects. We can avoid using metaphors that are confusing or distracting, and we can design metaphors that do exactly what we want. When we encounter metaphoric language, we can analyse what makes it effective or not. We can avoid being manipulated by subconscious metaphors, and we can accept the benefits of a metaphor while rejecting any aspects we find unhelpful or inaccurate.”
Karen Sullivan, Mixed Metaphors: Their Use and Abuse
“Image metaphors have probably had a disproportionate effect on opinions about metaphor because they are so noticeable and memorable. Conceptual metaphors, in contrast, are subtle and subconscious. When we use image metaphors, we often try to design one that’s novel and interesting. When we use a conceptual metaphor, we usually don’t even know that we’re doing it. As a result, conceptual metaphors have, until recently, received less attention from researchers and critics, and have had relatively little influence on popular and critical views of metaphor overall.”
Karen Sullivan, Mixed Metaphors: Their Use and Abuse
“Of course, the ‘living/dead’ nomenclature is itself a metaphor, in that it personifies metaphors as living beings that can ‘live’ and ‘die’. Like all metaphors, this personification metaphor is helpful in some ways but imperfect in others. It is useful because it allows us to think about ‘living’ metaphors as having some of the traits of living beings. That is, ‘living’ metaphors can be thought of as active, having effects, and able to cause changes. The personification metaphor also lets us effortlessly reason that ‘dead’ metaphors will not have effects or instigate changes. Nonetheless, in other respects the metaphor misrepresents the actual situation, because metaphors can be partly dead and partly alive.”
Karen Sullivan, Mixed Metaphors: Their Use and Abuse
“The fact that metaphors can sleep and wake is both bad news and good news for speakers and writers who want to avoid mixed metaphors. The bad news is that when a metaphoric word or phrase is sleeping for us, we probably won’t notice if we use the word or phrase in ways that are inconsistent with its source-domain meaning.”
Karen Sullivan, Mixed Metaphors: Their Use and Abuse
“Whether metaphors are strung together like separate beads on a string, or kneaded together into a compound, it’s important that we can use more than one of them.”
Karen Sullivan, Mixed Metaphors: Their Use and Abuse
“On questions relating to the human condition, no single metaphor has all the answers.”
Karen Sullivan, Mixed Metaphors: Their Use and Abuse
“Mixed metaphors with two source domains that don’t make sense together, […] are the structures that most deserve the name ‘mixed metaphors’.”
Karen Sullivan, Mixed Metaphors: Their Use and Abuse
“The ‘death’ of a metaphor is the loss of a connection between a metaphor and a specific word, not the loss of the conceptual metaphor itself. ‘Dead’ metaphors are words and phrases that were previously metaphoric, not conceptual metaphors that have disappeared. Conceptual metaphors generally ‘outlive’ the specific words and expressions that involve them.”
Karen Sullivan, Mixed Metaphors: Their Use and Abuse
“...all humans are given the same set of primary-metaphor building blocks, but different language and cultural groups put the blocks together in different ways. Some individuals even force the blocks together in ways that don’t fit – which is the major reason we get mixed metaphors.”
karen sullivan, Mixed Metaphors: Their Use and Abuse