Shakespearean Language: A Guide for Actors and StudentsBloomsbury Academic, 2002 - 269 頁 Shakespeare was a master of language, his sayings have become part of everyday speech, and his plays endure, in part, because of the beauty of his verse. Shakespeare's language, however, poses special difficulties for modern actors because many of his words seem unusual or difficult to pronounce, he employs rhetorical devices throughout his works, and he carefully uses rhythm to convey sense. |
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... effects , causes , consequences . Things base and vile , holding no quantity , Love can transpose to form and dignity , Love looks not with the eyes , but with the mind , And ... effect Acquiring an Elizabethan Rhetorical Facility 135.
... effect to the main argument ) H. Cause and Effect , Antecedent and Consequent • metonymy : substituting cause for effect or effect for cause • metalepsis : suggests that present situation is the result of a remote cause I ...
... effect . Modern actors might find the rigidity of the exchange antinaturalistic , but it is the precise mirroring of shape as well as content that makes the give and take such a demonstration of intellectual facility . Lest we think ...