abbreviation of a word by omitting the final sound or sounds; "the British get `pud' from `pudding' by apocope"
loss of the final portion of a word For example, info from information; cinema from cinematograph See also: aphaeresis
The loss of a final vowel e g , ME helpe > ModE help, NHG dem Tage > dem Tag See also syncope and aphaeresis
Deleting a syllable or letter from the end of a word In The Merchant of Venice, one character says, "when I ope my lips let no dog bark," and the last syllable of open falls away into ope before the reader's eyes (1 1 93-94) In Troilus and Cressida, Shakespeare proclaims, "If I might in entreaties find success--/ As seld I have the chance--I would desire / My famous cousin to our Grecian tents" (4 5 148) Here the word seldom becomes seld Apocope is an example of a rhetorical scheme
A type of elision in which a letter or syllable is omitted at the end of a word, as in morn for morning (Compare Aphaeresis, Syncope, Synaeresis, Synaloepha)