enthymeme

From LSJ

ἐν τῷ ῥά σφι κύκησε γυνὴ εἰκυῖα θεῆισιν οἴνῳ Πραμνείῳ, ἐπὶ δ' αἴγειον κνῆ τυρόν κνήστι χαλκείῃ, ἐπὶ δ' ἄλφιτα λευκὰ πάλυνε. → In it the woman, like the goddesses, mixed Pramnian wine for them, and over it she grated goat cheese with a bronze grater, and sprinkled white barley on it.

Source

Wikipedia EN

An enthymeme (Greek: ἐνθύμημα, enthumēma) is a rhetorical syllogism used in oratorical practice. Originally theorized by Aristotle, there are four types of enthymeme, at least two of which are described in Aristotle's work.

Aristotle referred to the enthymeme as "the body of proof", "the strongest of rhetorical proofs...a kind of syllogism" (Rhetoric I, 1.3,11). He considered it to be one of two kinds of proof, the other of which was the paradeigma. Maxims, Aristotle thought, were a derivative of enthymemes. (Rhetoric II.XX.1)

Translations

az: entimema; bg: ентимема; ca: entimema; cs: entyméma; de: Enthymem; en: enthymeme; es: entimema; et: entümeem; fr: enthymème; he: החבר; hu: entiméma; id: entimem; io: entimemo; it: entimema; ja: 省略三段論法; ky: энтимема; nl: enthymeem; pl: wnioskowanie entymematyczne; ru: энтимема; sh: entimem; sk: entyméma; sr: ентимем; sv: entymem; th: ตรรกบทย่อ; uk: ентимема