The Science of Rhetoric: An Introduction to the Laws of Effective Discourse (1877)Scholars' Facsimiles & Reprints, 1999 - 318 頁 |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 21 筆
第 14 頁
... conceptions which are beautiful ; Ethics , conceptions which are just . Rhetoric takes these conceptions and establishes them in the mind of another . Rhetoricians have frequently regarded Invention as a part of Rhetoric . Invention ...
... conceptions which are beautiful ; Ethics , conceptions which are just . Rhetoric takes these conceptions and establishes them in the mind of another . Rhetoricians have frequently regarded Invention as a part of Rhetoric . Invention ...
第 145 頁
... conception , as it must to be of any value to the sentence , the conception conveyed by the first word receives a modification from every additional word . The mind must put forth a new effort with every added syllable , to perceive it ...
... conception , as it must to be of any value to the sentence , the conception conveyed by the first word receives a modification from every additional word . The mind must put forth a new effort with every added syllable , to perceive it ...
第 165 頁
... conception . " God " suggests all that the mind has associated with that specific name , as representing a person ; while " Divine Being " is a more diffused notion . Divesting the sentence entirely of its specific character , and put ...
... conception . " God " suggests all that the mind has associated with that specific name , as representing a person ; while " Divine Being " is a more diffused notion . Divesting the sentence entirely of its specific character , and put ...
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常見字詞
abstract according action affirm Allegory animal antithesis Aristotle associated attention attributes beauty cause character classes composition conception condition contrast David Jayne Hill definition depends discourse distinct divided division economy of interpreting effect elements English English Language Enthymemes example exercises exposition fact feeling figures founded force Grammar harmony Hence Hill idea illustration important infer intellect interpreting power Introduction kind language Laws of Effective Laws of Form laws of mind laws of thought less Logic meaning ment mental metaphor Method Metonymy mode Narration narrative nature necessary notion object person plain poetry possess present principle produce proposition prose purpose qualities Quintilian reader reason reference relation requires resemblance rhetorician rhyme says Science of Rhetoric SECTION sense sentence simile sion Sir William Hamilton style suggest syllogism Synecdoche tence things thought time-relation tion true truth truth-relation unity variety violation Whately whole words writer