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单词 tautegorical
释义

tautegoricaladj.

Brit. /ˌtɔːtᵻˈɡɒrᵻkl/, U.S. /ˌtɔdəˈɡɔrək(ə)l/, /ˌtɑdəˈɡɔrək(ə)l/
Origin: Formed within English, by compounding. Etymons: tauto- comb. form, allegorical adj.
Etymology: < tauto- comb. form + -egorical (in allegorical adj.). Compare slightly later tautegory n.Compare German tautegorisch (1842 in F. W. J. von Schelling Einleitung in die Philosophie der Mythologie; < English). Although it has sometimes been suggested that Coleridge adapted the German word from Schelling, the reverse is shown by Schelling's explicit acknowledgement (in a footnote which first appeared in the posthumous 1856 edition of Einleitung in die Philosophie der Mythologie in vol. XI of Schelling's Collected Works) that he is indebted to Coleridge: Ich entlehne diesen Ausdruck von dem bekannten Coleridge (‘I borrow this term from the famous Coleridge’).
Of a symbol (usually in mythology or religion): signifying only itself, as opposed to representing or standing for something else; existing to draw attention to its own existence; (also) of or relating to this kind of symbolism. Frequently opposed to allegorical adj.Chiefly associated with Coleridge and the German philosopher Friedrich Schelling (1775–1854).
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > style of language or writing > figure of speech > figures of meaning > [adjective] > allegorical > tautegorical
tautegorical1820
1820 S. T. Coleridge Notebks. (1990) IV. 4711 Instead of being allegorical, it is therefore so far necessarily tautegorical.
1825 S. T. Coleridge Aids Refl. 199 The base, of Symbols and symbolical expressions; the nature of which as always tautegorical (i.e. expressing the same subject but with a difference) in contra-distinction from metaphors and similitudes, that are always allegorical (i.e. expressing a different subject but with a resemblance).
1846 B. Jowett in Life & Lett. (1897) I. v. 146 In one word he [sc. Coleridge] had comprised a whole essay, saying that mythology was not allegorical but tautegorical.
1863 A. P. Stanley Lect. Jewish Church I. vi. 136 The wilderness, as it intervenes between Egypt and the Land of Promise..is, as Coleridge would have said, not allegorical, but tautegorical, of the events which..we designate by those figures.
1985 R. F. Hobson Forms of Feeling viii. 3 The living symbol..cannot be reduced to other terms. Coleridge coins a word ‘tautegorical’ which can be rendered ‘self-declarative’.
2004 Jrnl. Hist. Ideas 65 473 I and thou are and are not the same. This tautegorical relation that is the condition of every other reverses the Kantian relation of ‘will’ and ‘law’.

Derivatives

ˌtauteˈgorically adv. in a tautegorical manner; as a tautegory.
ΚΠ
1872 Brit. Controversialist 28 91 It is by this fundamental distinction between allegorical and tautegorical figures, that he expounds the chief doctrines of Christianity, certain of them, as regeneration, being figured tautegorically; others, as the redemptive work of Christ, being figured allegorically.
1957 E. Cassirer Philos. Symbolic Forms III. ii. 62 If the philosophy of mythology is..to understand myth not only allegorically as a kind of primitive physics or history, but tautegorically as a symbol of independent significance and form, it must [etc.].
2005 Relig. & Lit. 37 29 The aesthetic response of mind to beauty in material things, is taken as real, yet cannot be described or invoked save ‘tautegorically’ by re-presenting the beautiful effect.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2014; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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adj.1820
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