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1. Exam-Specific & Confusing Devices

This final section covers a highly specific "bonus" category of terms that frequently appear on the UGC NET exam. These terms span across literary history (authorship issues), deep syntax, and phonological evolution. Because they do not fit neatly into standard "figurative language" categories, they are often tested to evaluate a candidate's comprehensive grasp of literary and linguistic anomalies.

Linguistic Mechanics: Swapping vs. Deleting Metathesis SWAPPING Sounds/Letters b r i d -> b i r d a s k -> a k s (Phonological Process) Equi-deletion DELETING Redundant Subjects "She promised [she would] help." "John wants [John] to leave." (Syntactic Process)

Figure 1: Visualizing the mechanics of Metathesis and Equi-deletion.

2. Authorship & Grammar: Apocrypha & Paradigm

Apocrypha

Definition: Writings or statements whose authorship or authenticity is doubtful, especially texts excluded from canonical or authoritative collections due to questionable origin or content. In literary contexts, it refers to dubious attributions or unofficial versions of known works. (πŸ”₯ Asked in Exam - Apocrypha is writings or statements of doubtful or spurious authorship).

  • Origin: From the Greek apokryphos, meaning β€œhidden” or β€œobscure.” Originally used for religious texts, it later entered literary criticism for texts falsely attributed to well-known authors.
  • Shakespeare Apocrypha: Plays like The Birth of Merlin or The London Prodigal were once attributed to Shakespeare but are now considered spurious.
  • Old Testament Apocrypha: Texts such as The Wisdom of Solomon or The Book of Tobit, once included in early Bibles, are now often labeled apocryphal.

Paradigm

Definition: In linguistics, a paradigm is a set of grammatically related forms of a word that demonstrate morphological variation such as tense, number, case, or person. It represents the full inflectional range of a lexical item. (πŸ”₯ Asked in Exam - A paradigm refers to a set of forms that are related by a grammatical feature, such as tense or number).

  • Origin: From Greek paradeigma, meaning β€œpattern” or β€œmodel.” Foundational in structuralist and generative grammar.
  • Verb Paradigm: The verb To be generates the paradigm: am, is, are, was, were. These illustrate subject-verb agreement and temporal distinction.
  • Noun Paradigm: Child β†’ Children, Man β†’ Men. These highlight morphological exceptions in English.

3. Omission & Transposition: Equi-deletion & Metathesis

Equi-deletion

Definition: In transformational grammar, it is a linguistic process where an identical subject in a subordinate clause is omitted because it is understood from the main clause, simplifying sentence structure.

  • Origin: Rooted in Chomskyan generative grammar (1960s–70s), coming from equi (equal) and deletion.
  • Syntactic Example: β€œJohn wants [John] to leave early.” β†’ β€œJohn wants to leave early.”
  • Syntactic Example: β€œShe promised [she would] help.” β†’ β€œShe promised to help.”
πŸ”₯ Exam Focus: An Alternate Definition
Be aware that the UGC NET has accepted an alternative/phonological application of this term in past exams: "Equi-deletion is a linguistic process where adjacent or identical syllables are reduced to one, making speech more efficient. For example, 'football' is often pronounced with one syllable in informal speech."

Metathesis

Definition: A linguistic phenomenon in which the order of sounds or letters in a word is transposed. It occurs in natural speech due to dialectal variation, unconscious error, or historical language change. It is a phonological process, not a rhetorical figure.

  • Origin: From the Greek metathesis, meaning β€œtransposition.”
  • Historical Change: The Old English word brid slowly morphed into the modern English word bird through metathesis.
  • Dialectal Variation: Pronouncing "ask" as "aks" (common in AAVE), or pronouncing "comfortable" as "comfterble" to ease articulation.

4. Frequently Asked Questions

What makes a text 'Apocryphal'?

A text is apocryphal if we cannot definitively prove who wrote it, or if it was falsely claimed to be written by a famous author (like Shakespeare) to sell more copies. It sits outside the established, verified "canon" of a writer's work.

Is Metathesis considered a speech error?

Sometimes it happens as an unconscious slip of the tongue (like a Spoonerism), but linguists do not consider it an "error." It is a natural phonological process that drives historical language evolution, usually happening because the transposed sounds are physically easier for the human mouth to pronounce in sequence.

How does a Paradigm work in language learning?

When you learn a new language and memorize verb conjugation tables (e.g., I walk, you walk, he walks, we walk), you are memorizing a paradigm. It is the complete master list of every shape a single root word can take.

UGC NET English, Rhetorical Devices, Linguistic Devices, Apocrypha, Equi-deletion, Metathesis, Paradigm, Shakespeare Apocrypha, Transformational Grammar, 23rd April, 2026

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