Style and Proportion: The Language of Prose and Poetry |
Результаты поиска по книге
Результаты 1 – 3 из 56
Стр. 68
Familiar as the voice of the mind is to each , the highest merit we ascribe to Moses , Plato , and Milton is that they set at naught books and traditions , and spoke not what men , but what they thought . A man should learn to detect ...
Familiar as the voice of the mind is to each , the highest merit we ascribe to Moses , Plato , and Milton is that they set at naught books and traditions , and spoke not what men , but what they thought . A man should learn to detect ...
Стр. 96
In totals of connectives from Tyndale's , Hobbes's , Milton's , Ruskin's 2000 to Shaw's , Lawrence's , Huxley's 1200 — almost twice as many for some as for others - examples of chief uses are : Browne and Milton , and ; Hooker , because ...
In totals of connectives from Tyndale's , Hobbes's , Milton's , Ruskin's 2000 to Shaw's , Lawrence's , Huxley's 1200 — almost twice as many for some as for others - examples of chief uses are : Browne and Milton , and ; Hooker , because ...
Стр. 98
But in each of the Renaissance centuries there were poets like Spenser , Shakespeare , Sylvester , Waller , Milton , and Dryden , and prosaists like Ascham , Bacon , Hobbes , Milton , and Locke , who pulled away toward a “ classic ” or ...
But in each of the Renaissance centuries there were poets like Spenser , Shakespeare , Sylvester , Waller , Milton , and Dryden , and prosaists like Ascham , Bacon , Hobbes , Milton , and Locke , who pulled away toward a “ classic ” or ...
Отзывы - Написать отзыв
Не удалось найти ни одного отзыва.
Содержание
Language and Proportion | 1 |
Styles in British Prose | 22 |
Styles in American Prose | 62 |
Авторские права | |
Не показаны другие разделы: 4
Другие издания - Просмотреть все
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
adjectival adjectives American Author balanced beauty begin bright Browne Cambridge century Chicago choice classical common connectives contrast Criticism death early effect English Essays example fall feel follow give hand hear heart History human John Johnson kind language later learned less light lines Linguistic Literary Literature live logic London look major mean measure metaphor Milton mind move nature negative night nouns Oxford pattern Philosophy phrase Poems poetic poetry poets positive possible predicative present proportion prose qualities reason reference relation relative rhetoric sense sentence simple soul sound speak stand stanzas statement stress strong structure Studies style subordinate sweet Theory thing Thomas thought tion tradition true truth turn University Press verbs verse whole words writers York