English understatement

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Understatement is an aspect of traditional English culture.[1] It has been exploited to humorous effect, but it is also characterised as part of the English cultural attitude to life.

Old English texts relied extensively upon wordplay such as understatement and double negatives;[2] understatement (litotes) is used at least 94 times in the Anglo-Saxon epic poem Beowulf, a "high frequency". One author has described this "stylistic mannerism" to be inherited from "an earlier, possibly common-Germanic, poetic tradition";[3] he notes that understatement is also found in mediaeval German poetry and Old Norse poetry. Such understatement may have the effect of mocking irony, humour, emphasis, and the tempering of an (otherwise rather sharp) expression.[3][4]

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