Elegant variation


Elegant variation is the use of synonyms in speech or writing to avoid repeating the same word. It often arises from a belief that simple parallel structure is or harms euphony or compositional tone. Most modern English style guides criticize elegant variation and consider that it causes loss of clarity, muddled metaphor, and inadvertent humor.
Henry Watson Fowler coined the term elegant variation for this phenomenon. It can be seen in journalism if word variation, such as the replacement of the word "fire" with "blaze" or "conflagration", draws attention to itself. It is considered particularly problematic in legal writing, scientific writing, and other technical writing, where the avoidance of ambiguity is essential. Alternatives to synonymy include repetition and the use of pro-forms.

"Inelegant variation"

in Garner's Modern American Usage proposes inelegant variation as a more appropriate name for the phenomenon, and asserts that, in coining the term elegant variation, Fowler was using elegant in a then-current pejorative sense of "excessively or pretentiously styled". Richard W. Bailey denies Garner's contention, suggesting that Fowler's use of elegant was a deliberate irony. Nevertheless, inelegant variation has been used by others, including Gerald Lebovits and Wayne Schiess.

In poetry

Elegant variation in poetry may occur because of a poet’s need to use a word which fits the scansion and rhyme pattern of the poem.

In other languages

In French, purists consider the rule of elegant variation essential for good style. A humorist imagined writing a news article about Gaston Defferre: "It's OK to say Defferre once, but not twice. So next you say the Mayor of Marseille. Then, the Minister of Planning. Then, the husband of Edmonde. Then, Gaston. Then, Gastounet and then... · Well, then you stop talking about him because you don't know what to call him next."

Examples