Merism – Definition, Use, Purpose & Examples

11.12.24 Stylistic devices Time to read: 4min

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Stylistic devices can greatly improve your text and help you present yourself as a quite literate person. This applies not only to belletristic writing but also to academic writing. Even though many forms of speech find greater application in literature than in science, knowing them can be useful when you have to analyse a text. The following article will explain merism to you, showing its use and purpose, as well as examples.

Merism in a nutshell

Merism is a stylistic device in which parts that constitute a whole are used to represent the entire whole.

Definition: Merism

A merism, pronounced mae-riz-m, is a stylistic device, where a whole is described through some or all of its parts. There is also a second option, where the entirety is emphasized through two extremes. The corresponding adjective to merism would then be meristic. It finds application in literature, especially in the Bible and everyday language, as the following examples show.

Examples

Describing a whole through its parts:

  • Flesh and bone (represents a whole person or living being)
  • Heart and soul (describes a person’s entire being or essence)

Emphasizing totality through extremes:

  • Heaven and earth (refers to everything that exists)
  • Night and day (represents the concept of all the time)
Merism-definition-example

Use and purpose

Stylistic devices are always used with a specific intention. For merism, there are a few different uses authors may consider when writing. The most common one is to create a sense of completion. The list of parts forming the whole projects specific images in the reader’s mind, which instinctively connect.

Example

  • He finished it in one go, hook, line, and sinker.

The image generated is one of a fishing rod, but the message we get is that he finished everything. This is because the three words are enough to generate the image of a whole in our head, suggesting that he completed the task entirely.

Another way to use a merism is to take two extremes to describe their medium. The extremes describe to what extent something was done, similar to a hyperbole.

Example

  • All the good and evil on this planet.

Good and evil are complete opposites, yet they fit together as a whole, describing the entirety of humanity on earth in this context.

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Merism vs. synecdoche

A rhetorical device, that can easily be confused with merism is synecdoche. Both use parts of a whole to replace it. However, the former one will use all (essential) parts to represent the entirety, while a synecdoche uses only one part. A synecdoche thus relies on association, while the merism focuses on images.

Examples

  • Merism: They went through high and low.
  • Synecdoche: The pen is mightier than the sword.

Examples of merism in the Bible

As merism is a very favoured stylistic device in the Bible, here are a few examples found in the holy script.

Examples

  • “In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth.” (Gen 1:1)

→ “Heavens and Earth” refers to the entirety of the world.

  • “But you must not eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, for when you eat from it you will certainly die.” (Gen 2:17)

→ “Good and Evil” refers to all the knowledge there is.

  • “The eyes of the Lord are everywhere, keeping watch on the wicked and the good.” (Prov 15:3)

→ “The wicked and the good” refers to the entirety of humans.

  • “The Lord will watch over your coming and going both now and forevermore.” (Psalm 121:8)

→ “Your coming and going” refers to the whole life of a human-

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FAQs

A merism is a way of describing a whole by mentioning its parts or two extremes, like “night and day” to mean “all the time.”

Famous examples of merisms are the first line from the Bible, “In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth.” or the saying “Lock, stock, and barrel.” as well as the introduction “ladies and gentlemen.”

Merism is used to create a sense of completion but also of an extreme power. This is why merisms are often used in the Bible to express the limitless capabilities of God or the greatness of acts.

While a merism uses two extremes or all essential parts of something to describe it, a synecdoche uses only one representative part of it.

From

Leonie Schmid

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About the author

Leonie Schmid is studying marketing management at IU Nuremberg in a dual program and is working towards a bachelor's degree. She has had a passion for writing ever since she was little, whether it is fiction or later on scientific. Her love for the English language and academic topics has led her to BachelorPrint as a dual student, seeking to provide educational content for students everywhere all around the world.

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