Style and Proportion: The Language of Prose and PoetryLittle, Brown, 1967 - Всего страниц: 212 |
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Стр. 94
... relative which and who , and the conjunctive prepositional and , as , but , for , or , when , where ; among these , and is by far the strongest . These conjunctive - prepositional terms , with their greater flexibility of use — before ...
... relative which and who , and the conjunctive prepositional and , as , but , for , or , when , where ; among these , and is by far the strongest . These conjunctive - prepositional terms , with their greater flexibility of use — before ...
Стр. 95
... relative and conjunctive forms are not great either in total amounts or in individuals , except for Donne's and Swinburne's mag- nitudes in poetry , and the Bible's , Milton's , and Locke's strong relatives in prose . In prepositions ...
... relative and conjunctive forms are not great either in total amounts or in individuals , except for Donne's and Swinburne's mag- nitudes in poetry , and the Bible's , Milton's , and Locke's strong relatives in prose . In prepositions ...
Стр. 124
... relative position within a group or class - the sort of position which , when carried out through the other implied places , yields allegory . If the dove is a cabbage , then the tanager is a carrot , and the parrot is a squash . It is ...
... relative position within a group or class - the sort of position which , when carried out through the other implied places , yields allegory . If the dove is a cabbage , then the tanager is a carrot , and the parrot is a squash . It is ...
Содержание
Styles in British Prose | 22 |
Styles in American Prose | 62 |
Styles in Prose and Poetry | 79 |
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Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
adjectives Aesthetics American Author balanced beauty begin Browne Cambridge century Chicago choice classical connectives contrast Criticism death early effect English Essays example fall feel follow George give hand Harvard Haven hear heart History human John Johnson kind Language later learned less light lines Linguistics Literary Literature logic London look major Mass mean measure metaphor Michigan Milton mind move nature negative night nouns pattern Paul Philosophy phrases Poems poetic poetry poets positive possible predicative present proportion prose qualities reason reference relation Rhetoric Science sense sentence simple sound speak stand stanzas statement stress strong structure Study style subordinate sweet Theory thing Thomas thought tion tradition Trans true University of California University Press verbs verse whole writers York