The Principles of RhetoricAmerican book Company, 1923 - 431 páginas |
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Página 3
... The Sources of Standard English , chap . v . 2 Walter Savage Landor : Conversations , Third Series ; Johnson and Horne Tooke ) . The fastidiousness that objects to well - established words because GOOD USE . 3 CHAP GOOD CHAP.
... The Sources of Standard English , chap . v . 2 Walter Savage Landor : Conversations , Third Series ; Johnson and Horne Tooke ) . The fastidiousness that objects to well - established words because GOOD USE . 3 CHAP GOOD CHAP.
Página 4
Adams Sherman Hill. The fastidiousness that objects to well - established words because their appearance " proclaims their vile and despicable origin , " or to well - understood phrases because they " contain some word that is never used ...
Adams Sherman Hill. The fastidiousness that objects to well - established words because their appearance " proclaims their vile and despicable origin , " or to well - understood phrases because they " contain some word that is never used ...
Página 7
... object , his language must be such The true test as his readers understand , and understand as lish . he understands it . If he is so fond of antiquity as to prefer a word that has not been in use since the twelfth or the seventeenth ...
... object , his language must be such The true test as his readers understand , and understand as lish . he understands it . If he is so fond of antiquity as to prefer a word that has not been in use since the twelfth or the seventeenth ...
Página 11
... object to " talented , " for the word is now sanctioned by good use . 2 Macaulay ; in Trevelyan's " Life and Letters of Macaulay , ” vol . ii shap . ix . in matters of pronunciation and accent , the standard , GOOD USE . 11.
... object to " talented , " for the word is now sanctioned by good use . 2 Macaulay ; in Trevelyan's " Life and Letters of Macaulay , ” vol . ii shap . ix . in matters of pronunciation and accent , the standard , GOOD USE . 11.
Página 18
... objects of perception , thing outside ourselves , is preferable to conscious , since conscious strictly refers to sensations , thoughts , or feelings , things within our selves . - Deathly , in the sense of " resembling death , " as ...
... objects of perception , thing outside ourselves , is preferable to conscious , since conscious strictly refers to sensations , thoughts , or feelings , things within our selves . - Deathly , in the sense of " resembling death , " as ...
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American newspaper analogy antecedent probability Anthony Trollope argue argument arrangement authors Bagheera Barchester Towers beginning better Bride of Lammermoor Burke called Cardinal Newman chap character Charles Reade clearness composition Daniel Webster E. F. Benson ease effect English Essays example exposition expression fact fallacy feelings following passage force George Eliot give hand Herbert Spencer Ibid idea instance J. S. Mill kind language lect less look Lord Macaulay Martin Chuzzlewit matter Matthew Arnold means ment metaphor method Middlemarch Milton mind narration narrative nature never object observation paragraph persons phrase poetry poets present principle proposition prose purpose question Quincey reader reason Rhetoric rule Ruskin scene Scott sect sense sentence Shakspere simile sometimes speak Spectator speech story Student's theme style tence Thackeray thing thou thought tion truth unity verb whole words writer