in Rhetoric, otherwise called reticency and suppression; a figure, by which a person really speaks of a thing, at the same time that he makes a show as if he would say nothing of it. The word comes from ἀποσιωπάω, I am silent.—It is commonly used to denote the same with ellipsis. Jul. Scaliger distinguishes them. The latter, according to him, being only the suppression of a word; as me, me; adsum qui feci; the former, the omitting to relate some part of the action; as,
Dixerat, atque illam media inter talia ferro Collapsam adspicuit.
where the poet does not mention how Dido killed herself.—This figure is of use to keep up the grandeur and sublimity of a discourse.