Monthly Archives: September 2025

Comprobatio

Comprobatio (com-pro-ba’-ti-o): Approving and commending a virtue, especially in the hearers.


“You are all perfect. Perfect in myriad ways. Perfect liars. Perfect cheaters. Perfect narcissists. Perfect assholes.” These were the opening words of my opening address as the newly elected president of the “Northridge Neanderthals.” Our credo was “Go against the flow,” as our namesakes did millennia ago. While the other cave men were wearing footwear and bearskins, our male namesakes were running around naked and wearing little hats made out of tiger dung. They believed that tiger dung hats would attract mates. They were wrong. They repelled mates, so they had to chase after them, barefoot. When they caught a mate they would often have bloody feet. Frequently they would get infected and the Neanderthal would die before having a chance to mate. Their burial rite consisted of throwing the deceased into a saber-tooth tiger den. This was easier than digging a hole and throwing the colleague in.

We revere the Neanderthals for their stupidity and laziness. One of the requirements for joining the Northridge Neanderthals is a lower than average I.Q. Prospective members have to visibly struggle with math and spelling and most tasks that invited physical coordination like driving a car or fishing. Also, perspective members have to demonstrate a clear tendency to be scammed—especially on the Internet.

We filled a niche in natural order. Once fully-fledged we would be permitted to make the Neanderthal Cry: “Fu*k this!” It celebrates our hostility toward any kind of challenge—intellectual or physical—and the valor of giving up and falling behind.

It is our heritage. We look forward to extinction like non-Neanderthals look forward to going to heaven. We have folksongs celebrating our hope: “Where did all the Neanderthals go?” “She’s not there.” “There goes my baby.” “Extinct doesn’t stink.”

We hope for natural disasters. Don’t take this the wrong way. We want you to survive as the “fittest.” in this sense, Charles Darwin provides us with hope.


Definitions courtesy of “Silva Rhetoricae” (rhetoric.byu.edu).

The Daily Trope is available on Amazon in paperback under the title of The Book of Tropes for $9.95. It is also available in Kindle format for $5.99.

Conduplicatio

Conduplicatio (con-du-pli-ca’-ti-o): The repetition of a word or words. A general term for repetition sometimes carrying the more specific meaning of repetition of words in adjacent phrases or clauses. Sometimes used to name either ploce or epizeuxis.


I was crazy. My life was crazy. Everything was crazy. Crazy, crazy, crazy. But I didn’t believe I was crazy. That’s what made me crazy. They called me paranoid and schizophrenic. But I was neither.

There was a man named Bogey who wore a picnic table tablecloth who followed me around with a lit cigarette lighter and a toy plastic horse. He had demonic eyes and said in a squeaky voice “Get moving.” I would walk faster and he would walk faster until, eventually, we’d be running. I was repeatedly thrown out of the mall, train and bus stations, and baseball stadiums for running. The worst was when he chased me in the airport and I got thrown out and missed my flight—it cost me thousands of dollars in missed flights and business meetings.

When Bogey waved the plastic horse at me, I fell to the floor writhing like a snake and singing the “Star Spangled Banner.” This got me more than kicked out—it got me a trip to the Nut House. I explained that it was a rare seizure that was genetically based and inherited from my great grandfather who was “Amazonian” (I made this up). Usually, I stayed over night for observation and was freed the flowing day. When I had to stay longer, I texted my fake lawyer Marley. He was seven feet tall and scared the hell out of people. He never failed to get me released on the spot. I would usually see Bogey outside and we’d start all over again, running through a mall.

My schizophrenia was hard to cope with, especially in my romantic life. I would frequently become a new version of me, just when my girlfriend was getting used to the old version. I started naming myself like a computer operating system, like Billy 6.8. It helped her keep up with both old and new versions of me. Billy 4.0 was loving and gentle. Billy 5.1 was a sadistic loser. Eventually my girlfriend walked out on me. She claimed I was like a merry-go-round that was too fast and made her dizzy. Billy 7.3 wanted to kill her. “I” couldn’t help it—I was crazy. Remember?

Billy 7.3 developed a plan—a ruthless and complicated plan—to kill her. I would wrap her up in rubber bands and make her into a human yo-yo that I would throw off the roof of the 10 story building where I lived. Billy 2.0 intervened and sabotaged 7.3’s plans. He quoted the Bible—Paul’s Epistles to the Corinthians and a shitload of Proverbs. That was it. I affected Billy 2.0 and put Billy 7.3 away somewhere way back in the back of my head. I might’ve killed him.

Since I have started taking “Suppressors” and my mental things have flattened out, Bogey is gone and the “Billy Versions” have flattened into one—Version 2.0. I have become a street-corner preacher. I sell glow in the dark crucifixes and urns made out of plastic wine glasses. I also yell proverbs at passersby, informing their spiritual improvement.


Definitions courtesy of “Silva Rhetoricae” (rhetoric.byu.edu).

The Daily Trope is available on Amazon in paperback under the title of The Book of Tropes for $9.95. It is also available in Kindle format for $5.99.

Congeries

Congeries (con’ger-eez): Piling up words of differing meaning but for a similar emotional effect [(akin to climax)].


“Ouch! Hell! Stop it!” I was the worst dental patient. I yelled from the chair, letting my pain be known to everybody in earshot. The dentist hated me. He tried everything to make me shut up. Patients would actually leave their appointments due to my cries. He finally resorted to overdosing me on nitrous oxide. No more cries of pain! Now I yelled “Wow man!” Or “Far out!”

I liked nitrous oxide. I got some on the dark web along with the huffing equipment. I sucked it all day. I told my colleagues at work that I had severe asthma. They pitied me having to carry the face mask and canister everywhere. Little did they know how blissful it made me. I would carry my canister up Mt. Everest if I had to.

Then I met Peggy Sue. Her parents had named her after the Buddy Holly song. She was crossed-eyed. But she had beautiful red hair—like a pile of autumn leaves burning on top of her head. I told her about my asthma. It was hard hugging her with my canister in the way. It made kindling a romance difficult. She said it was cold against her chest.

There was no way I was giving up nitrous. I decided to get her addicted. I bought her a canister and face mask. I helped put it on her. I told her it was an instrument of empathy and would make us love each other even more. She took her first puff and she was hooked—she made a little squealing sound that was endearing. When we hugged our tanks clanked together, sounding like wedding bells.

We took the hint and got married. We are high all the time. Our life together is a gas.


Definitions courtesy of “Silva Rhetoricae” (rhetoric.byu.edu).

The Daily Trope is available on Amazon in paperback under the title of The Book of Tropes for $9.95. It is also available in Kindle format for $5.99.

Consonance

Consonance: The repetition of consonants in words stressed in the same place (but whose vowels differ). Also, a kind of inverted alliteration, in which final consonants, rather than initial or medial ones, repeat in nearby words. Consonance is more properly a term associated with modern poetics than with historical rhetorical terminology.


I was walking down the street singing “I shot the sheriff, I did not shoot the deputy.” I was a little drunk. I was glad. Things were good. I ‘d had another banner day at the car wash. $50 in tips! I could take Taffy out to dinner. I was a winner.

From out of the darkness a voice said “Put up your hands and turn around.” I looked into the darkness and the Deputy stepped into the dim light. “Yes, it’s true, you didn’t shoot me, as you were singing of your disgusting deed. Look down. Yes, it’s the Sheriff bled to death on the pavement from six bullet holes in his head. You are a psychopath—you should be ashamed for singing about it like it was a joke.” I tried to tell the Deputy that I was singing a reggae song by Bob Marley that was later covered by Eric Clapton and achieved quite a bit of success.

The Deputy tasered me. He handcuffed me, manacled me, and shoved me into the back seat of his police car. As we drove to the station he told me how much he loved the Sheriff and how his death would probably trigger a crime wave in Bolingberg. He told me he would be happy to let me off in the woods by the abandoned munitions plant. We could play a game: “Deputy and His Prey.” I told him I wouldn’t be very good prey wearing handcuffs and manacles.

I was completely freaking out. He pulled up at the head of a trail leading into the woods. He opened the door and pulled me out of the police car. He told me to crawl into the woods and he would ride me. As I crawled along he ordered me to sing “Bob Marney” for him and put his gun to the back of my head.

I saw what looked like a bonfire up ahead. As we got closer, the Sheriff stood up from among the other men sitting there. The Sheriff was alive! I was saved! He said, “Congratulations dickhead. You passed! You are now a member of Lodge 345 of the Fraternal Order of Immature Wonks. What do you have to say?” I said “This is total crock of shit (I heard the Deputy cocking his gun), but I love it.


Definitions courtesy of “Silva Rhetoricae” (rhetoric.byu.edu).

The Daily Trope is available on Amazon in paperback under the title of The Book of Tropes for $9.95. It is also available in Kindle format for $5.99.

Correctio

Correctio (cor-rec’-ti-o): The amending of a term or phrase just employed; or, a further specifying of meaning, especially by indicating what something is not (which may occur either before or after the term or phrase used). A kind of redefinition, often employed as a parenthesis (an interruption) or as a climax.


“I am going to be famous someday—not just famous. I’ll be more than famous. I’ll be a legend, almost a deity. Look at me! What do you see?” I told him I saw a lunatic. He was wearing see-through harem pants, a sweater with a snowmobile on it, and a pair of pointy Mexican tribal boots (botas tribaleras). He also had a wand, which looked like a gun barrel. He aimed it at me and I thought I was going to die. It made a loud cracking sound, like a gunshot. But it wasn’t a gunshot. It was about two-dozen Q-tips that came flying at me. They had been dipped in taco sauce so my clothes would be stained with a red blood-like liquid.

“Why don’t you do something worthy of a legend?” I yelled. He said, “Coming right up!” “This should be good” I said to myself. We had gone to high school together and I knew he was bluffing. He had backed off on burning down the school. He had chickened out on blowing up the Driver Ed car. He had never asked Ms. Tardy, our gym teacher, out on a date. He failed to seed the school cafeteria lunch with laxatives. The only thing he’d ever done was pee on the school fuse box and nearly be electrocuted, moaning and crying as he was taken away in an ambulance. So, I couldn’t wait to see what was “Coming right up.”

I think it was suicide.

He went in his house’s garage and closed the door. I heard his dad’s car start. He was going for carbon monoxide poisoning! What an idiot. There was no way killing himself in his garage would make him a legend. Yelling at him through the garage door, I explained this to him. The car’s engine shut off and the garage door opened. Then I realized: he could become a legend for being a world-class idiot, which he was.

He was ecstatic when I told him. He ran down the driveway waving his wand. He turned to thank me and tripped over his black and white pedal police car he had left in the middle of the driveway. He landed in the street where his head was squashed by a passing “Jolly Clown Ice Cream” truck. There was a bunch of kids following the truck, clamoring for ice cream whose lives were forever altered by the squashed head.

For some reason I couldn’t stop laughing at the squashed head. I am in counseling to find the answer. My therapist told me to be prepared to come to the conclusion that his gruesome death was funny. We practice recounting the event and fake laughing together, like Santa Claus (Ho, Ho, Ho), and slapping each other on the back. So far, it isn’t working.

The hardest part of my therapy is having to keep a photo of the crushed head in a frame on my bedside table. It is the first thing I see in the morning. Yesterday, I almost laughed when I saw it. I think I might be making progress.

This phase of my life has made me want to be a coroner, like on television detective shows. I will be called Dr, Squish, after my specialty in squished heads. Right now, it is only a dream. If I can get a scholarship, my dream will come true.


Definitions courtesy of “Silva Rhetoricae” (rhetoric.byu.edu).

The Daily Trope is available on Amazon in paperback under the title of The Book of Tropes for $9.95. It is also available in Kindle format for $5.99.