The Movement of English ProseLongmans, 1966 - 182 páginas |
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Página 152
Ian Alistair Gordon. controlled it degenerates easily into excess . The educated have not always written it well ; and the ill - educated , over whom it sometimes exercises a fatal fascination , have always written it badly . It has ...
Ian Alistair Gordon. controlled it degenerates easily into excess . The educated have not always written it well ; and the ill - educated , over whom it sometimes exercises a fatal fascination , have always written it badly . It has ...
Página 157
... educated with the educated , were openly abandoned . Blackwood reviewing Lamb's works in 1818 frankly sneered at ' that dull or stupid prosing that weighs down the dying Edinburgh Review ' , and praised Lamb's style in a series of ...
... educated with the educated , were openly abandoned . Blackwood reviewing Lamb's works in 1818 frankly sneered at ' that dull or stupid prosing that weighs down the dying Edinburgh Review ' , and praised Lamb's style in a series of ...
Página 163
... educated speech - the writer tends to identify himself with the more educated of his audience , and the voice of the author as narrator is indistinguishable from his authentic voice as it can be heard in ( e.g. ) Thackeray's letters or ...
... educated speech - the writer tends to identify himself with the more educated of his audience , and the voice of the author as narrator is indistinguishable from his authentic voice as it can be heard in ( e.g. ) Thackeray's letters or ...
Términos y frases comunes
accepted Addison Aelfric Alfred's Alfredian prose Anglo-Saxon audience baroque Bible Book C. L. WRENN Cambridge Chapter chronicle Ciceronian classical clauses colloquial continuity conversation critical Donne earlier early educated EETS England English language English prose essay Euphuism fifteenth French halga homilies humanist Humanist Latinity imagery influence Jane Austen later Latin latinised learning linguistic literary London loose and free Lord main statements mediaeval medium metaphor Middle English Milton modern English movement of speech narrative native never novel Old English Old English prose Oxford parataxis passage pattern Pecock period periodic sentence phrases poetry poets preaching printed prose style Quintilian R. W. Chambers reader reading recognisable renaissance rhetoric rhythm romantic prose semantic Senecan sentence-structure sermon seventeenth century Sir Thomas sixteenth century speech-based prose stress structure syntactical syntax Tacitus texts thou tion tongue translation Tristram Shandy Tyndale verb verse vocabulary word-groups word-order words writing written prose