There are phrases which pair things up. For example, "checks and balances", "bells and whistles",
What is the rational behind this construct? Any more examples?
|
|
One rationale for the pairings may just be that using them sounds better than a single word. They add a bit of rhythm to the sentence |
|||
|
|
|
It is a figure of style known since Antiquity, called hendiadys, "one through two": two parallel nominal words are used to express a single idea, which would ordinarily be expressed by a "head" word and an attribute. There is no reason for this phenomenon but style. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hendiadys |
|||
|
|
|
Off the top of my head, I would suggest two broad rationales for these idiomatic pairings: 1) contrast and 2) emphasis (based on the similarity between the words making up the pair). Contrast
Emphasis
|
||||
|
|
|
There are some phrases that pair synonyms where one of the words is considered archaic, for example:
"Kith" and "kin" both mean "relatives" -- kith is archaic. "Time" and "tide" both mean "time" -- tide, in this sense, is archaic (compare to "Zeit" and "tijd" in German and Dutch). |
|||
|
|
Cooper and Ross 1975 deal with both kinds of such English fixed conjoined phrases (which they call Freezes) -- the ones where the conjoined words have meaning, like
as well as the kind where they don't, like
They show that both types of freezes follow the the same phonological rules. |
|||||||||||
|