
As a child, did you sing: “Rain, rain go away?” I did and I feel like doing it again today! Dreary skies are depressing, but we must think positive. This too will end. It will be warm and sunny, flowers will bloom, and life will go on. So many people have it worse than I do. What’s a little rain?

Today’s letter is the letter L. To me in my writing, L stands for Litotes. I can hear you right now saying, litotes? What the heck are those? Litotes are a figure of speech using understatement as a rhetorical device. This is done by using the negative to mean the opposite, and believe it or not, we do it all the time. Yes, that’s right. Even you do it.
How many times have you said, “not bad” about something that was good? Not bad can mean anything from so-so to excellent. Another example might be, I don’t hate it, when what you really mean is you like it or you’re undecided. Litotes are deliberate understatements used for emphasis, with the interpretation of the negation depending on the context, intonation, and emphasis. It may also depend on the generation. For example, what was cool to me, might be sick to someone else.
That’s it. Come back tomorrow for more. Check out the other posts here. https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1nuoAOJ-BUAXE1Yl2yIArhUHInj902PHVX6_gL4oKiSo/edit#gid=1195767304
I love learning new words – and this is a great one!
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