synecdoche
noun·/sɪˈnɛk.də.ki/
A figure of speech in which a part stands for the whole, the whole for a part, the species for the genus, or the material for the thing. Meaning traded through a precise substitution. Where metaphor shifts by resemblance, synecdoche shifts by belonging.
“All hands on deck,” he said—synecdoche turning bodies into labor by naming the part that works.
Etymology
From Greek synekdoche "understanding one thing with another," from syn- "together" + ekdechesthai "to take up." A kind of mental bookkeeping.
Related Words
metonymyassociation rather than part–whole
pars pro totoLatin label for part-for-whole
zeugmaanother figure of linkage and strain
catachresismisapplied term; synecdoche done wrong can become it