The Original Rhythmical Grammar of the English LanguageGeorg Olms Verlag, 1976 - 348 頁 |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 27 筆
第 12 頁
... artificial quantities . As musical pronunciation must depend on musical succession , and as artificial prosody destroys this suc- cession , it must follow , that whatever the cause may have been that separated poetry from music , an ...
... artificial quantities . As musical pronunciation must depend on musical succession , and as artificial prosody destroys this suc- cession , it must follow , that whatever the cause may have been that separated poetry from music , an ...
第 115 頁
... artificial prosody , cannot answer in any suitable degree to rhythm ; for the commen tators have told us , and our learned prosodians and gram- marians scrupulously follow their directions , that their long and short syllables were in ...
... artificial prosody , cannot answer in any suitable degree to rhythm ; for the commen tators have told us , and our learned prosodians and gram- marians scrupulously follow their directions , that their long and short syllables were in ...
第 212 頁
... ARTIFICIAL PROSODY MAKE AMONG YOUR WORKS !!! Milton's genius was too lofty to stoop to gratify the hypercriticism of the devotees of Greek and Latin prosody , applied to the rhythm of English verse . Instances are constantly occurring ...
... ARTIFICIAL PROSODY MAKE AMONG YOUR WORKS !!! Milton's genius was too lofty to stoop to gratify the hypercriticism of the devotees of Greek and Latin prosody , applied to the rhythm of English verse . Instances are constantly occurring ...
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常見字詞
accidents of language acute accent acute and grave Anapest ancient applied Arsis and Thesis Artificial Feet artificial prosody beauty called circumflex composed dactyl degrees Demosthenes diphthong distinct elocution English English language equal Examples expression eyes force grace Grammar grammarians grave accent Greek and Latin Greek language guage heart heaven heavy and light heavy syllable honour iambus inflexions light syllables loud and soft marked meter monosyllables monotone nature nerally never nosyllables notes o'er organic emphasis organs of speech passion peculiar pleasure poet poetry poize pronounced pronunciation proper proportion prose prosodians quantity reader reading and speaking rhetorical pauses rhythm Rhythmical Cadences rules scanning semibrief sense sentence Shakespeare sing Slow song soul sound speaker spoken language spondee sweet syllabic emphasis taste thee thou tion tone triple cadences trochee varieties verse virtue voice vowel words