Synecdoche
Synecdoche is a kind of metonymy in which:- A part of something is used for the whole,
- The whole is used for a part,
- The species is used for the genus,
- The genus is used for the species, or
- The stuff of which something is made is used for the thing.
- "hands" to refer to workers, "head" to refer to cattle, "threads" to refer to clothing, "mouths to feed" to refer to hungry people
- "the police" for a handful of officers, the "smiling year" for "spring"
- "cutthroat" for "assassin", "kleenex" for "facial tissue"
- "creature" for "man", "vehicle" for, say, "car"
- "hickory" for "baseball bat", "copper" for "penny", "boards" for "stage", "ivories" for "piano keys"
Also, sonnets and other forms of (erotic) love poetry frequently use synecdoches to characterize the beloved in terms of individual body parts rather than a whole, coherent self. This practice is especially common in the Petrarchan sonnet, where the idealised beloved is often described part by part, from head to toe.