Linguistics and Literary StyleDonald C. Freeman |
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Page 43
... course , be erroneous . The second special question which we shall attempt to answer concerns the different function of the two forms of language . This is the core of the problem . The function of poetic language consists in the ...
... course , be erroneous . The second special question which we shall attempt to answer concerns the different function of the two forms of language . This is the core of the problem . The function of poetic language consists in the ...
Page 212
... course more goes on here than synonymic word play or ple- onasm , for the second label somehow yields new understanding of Shaw's subject — to name helps to know . But it is important to see that naming a thing twice means establishing ...
... course more goes on here than synonymic word play or ple- onasm , for the second label somehow yields new understanding of Shaw's subject — to name helps to know . But it is important to see that naming a thing twice means establishing ...
Page 342
... course , is that Aristotle has made clear the distinction between art and other activities and products of human beings : all art is imita- tion . Should we seek explanations of that statement , we might find them in Freud . But let us ...
... course , is that Aristotle has made clear the distinction between art and other activities and products of human beings : all art is imita- tion . Should we seek explanations of that statement , we might find them in Freud . But let us ...
Contents
Linguistic Approaches to Literature Donald C | 3 |
Linguistics and Literary History Leo Spitzer | 21 |
Standard Language and Poetic Language | 40 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
actualized alliteration analysis appear beginning called Chaucer clause clear common complex Condition connectives consider consists construction contain course criticism described determined discussion distinction effect elements English example expression fact final foot foregrounding formal four given grammar hand iambic important initial interesting kind language least less lexical linguistic literary matter maximum meaning meter metrical nature neutralization nominal norm noun occupied occur particular passage pattern phonological phrase poem poet poetic poetry position possible present principles prose prosody question reader reason reference regular relation relationship requires result rhyme rhythm rules seems semantic sense sentence similar single sound speech standard stress maxima structure style stylistic suggest syllable syntactic Talk theory things tion transformations trochaic units verbs verse vowel words writer