subtext
English
Noun
subtext (plural subtexts)
- (authorship) The implicit meaning of a text, often a literary one, or a speech or dialogue.
- Everyone heard the announcement, but not everyone agrees on what the subtext was.
- 2011, Patrick Spedding, James Lambert, “Fanny Hill, Lord Fanny, and the Myth of Metonymy”, in Studies in Philology, volume 108, number 1, page 113:
- The word dick has meant penis since the 1890s, but Chester Gould’s private detective “Dick Tracy” has no puerile subtext related to this word.
Derived terms
Descendants
- → Hebrew: סאבטקסט (sábtekst)
Translations
implicit meaning of a text
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See also
Verb
subtext (third-person singular simple present subtexts, present participle subtexting, simple past and past participle subtexted)
- To create or use a subtext.
- 2002, Collins, Brandilyn, Getting into character : seven secrets a novelist can learn from actors, →OCLC:
- Subtexting is the technique that every author needs to know in order to create dialogue that is rich in meaning while sounding natural, for in real life, this is the way people often converse.
See also
Romanian
Declension
Declension of subtext
Further reading
- subtext in DEX online—Dicționare ale limbii române (Dictionaries of the Romanian language)
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