aeolism
Etymology
From Aeolic + -ism.
noun
- The use of the Aeolic language or its syntactic structures.“This approach, however, of Aeolians to Ionians is ambiguous and accidental, and historical indications go far to show that their distinction was all but primitive; that Dorism developed independently from an Aeolism with which Ionism was already in marked contrast, at some point of earlier departure, rather than that Ionism and Dorism together were collateral shoots from an original main Aeolic st”
- A usage of Aeolic within a work in another language.“Cassola regards the short form as an Aeolism (cf. Chantraine I, 161-3), which from an epic point of view would be an archaism.”
- A fictional religion in the works of Jonathan Swift that worships the wind in general, and rhetorical form over substance in particular.“Of course Aeolism is only a satirical invention, but it has a general application to all absurd philosophising (also to 'common sense' - a terrifying twist, this, uniquely Swiftian).”
- A tendency toward rhetorical embellishments.“Aeolism, or the emphasis on the form or sound of words per se rather than on their meaning or sense, presently flourishes under many dignified guises.”
- A reference to or instance of wind; windiness.“'Aeolisms abound in the course of the episode; 'big blow out,' 'the vent of his jacket,' 'windfall when he kicks out,' etc."”