The expressive techniques of metonymic poems

A metaphor. Ontology and figurative words do not appear, only vehicles appear. Metonymy is generally divided into two types: one is to hide the ontology, and metonymy replaces the ontology. For example, Cang Kejia's "Old Horse" hides the noumenon-an industrious and simple farmer who was oppressed and exploited in old China, but it is just a metaphor-the old horse: "You have to ask the cart to pack enough,/it doesn't say a word anyway,/the pressure on its back is buckled into the meat,/it hangs its head heavily! /I don't know the fate of the next moment./It only swallows tears in its heart./A whip shadow floats in its eyes./It looks up at the front. " The other is to hide the vehicle and replace it with words that express the behavior and character of the vehicle. For example, in Wen Jie's Secret, the girl who wrote her first love was very happy after meeting her lover by the spring, and her smiling face was like a flower, but the author omitted the metaphor-flower, and borrowed the word (blooming) instead: "The girl came back from the spring/got a few drops of water on her braid/laughed and blossomed in her eyes, eyebrows/heart, so she jumped out of her mouth!"