What is the difference between synecdoche and metonymy?
Synecdoche and metonymy are both tropes that replace one word with another. While they are similar, they are distinctly different.
Synecdoche is when you use a part of something to refer to the whole (or vice versa), while metonymy uses a closely related word to replace another word.
For example, referring to a newspaper as “the paper” is synecdoche because the newspaper is made up of paper, while “the news” is metonymy because it is a word closely associated with “newspaper.”
Scribbr’s free Paraphrasing Tool can help you come up with synonyms to help you with using synecdoche in your writing.