Rhetorical Analyses of Literary WorksEdward P. J. Corbett Oxford University Press, 1969 - 272页 |
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共有 30 个结果,这是第 1-3 个
第74页
... discussion at hand . Specifi- cally designed to celebrate virtue or to castigate vice in the past as Dryden does in ... discuss other parts such as the digression and the proposition , the most common listing gives six basic parts ...
... discussion at hand . Specifi- cally designed to celebrate virtue or to castigate vice in the past as Dryden does in ... discuss other parts such as the digression and the proposition , the most common listing gives six basic parts ...
第97页
... discussion of each ( e.g. for the first cause in the fifth of fourteen paragraphs , for the second and fourth causes in the fourth of eight paragraphs ) ; even then he usually does not develop these at all fully , and at that only with ...
... discussion of each ( e.g. for the first cause in the fifth of fourteen paragraphs , for the second and fourth causes in the fourth of eight paragraphs ) ; even then he usually does not develop these at all fully , and at that only with ...
第117页
... discussion of this problem is Reginald Farrer's “ Jane Austen , " Quarterly Review , CCXXVIII ( July 1917 ) , 1–30 ; reprinted in William Heath's Discussions of Jane Austen ( Boston , 1961 ) . For one critic the book fails because the ...
... discussion of this problem is Reginald Farrer's “ Jane Austen , " Quarterly Review , CCXXVIII ( July 1917 ) , 1–30 ; reprinted in William Heath's Discussions of Jane Austen ( Boston , 1961 ) . For one critic the book fails because the ...
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常见术语和短语
actually analysis answer Apologia appear argument arrangement audience beginning believe called cause chapter character Christian Church classical complex concern considered course death devices difference direct discourse discussion Donne Donne's Dryden effect Elizabethan Emma emotions English Essays established example fact feel figures final follows force given gives hate human important irony James Jane John kind Language least less lines literary logic meaning mind Mistress Modern Language Association moral nature Newman's object opening paragraph particular passage perhaps person persuasion play poem poet poetic poetry Pope position present principle proof prose provides question readers reading reason reference Renaissance response rhetorical criticism says seems sense sentence serve speak speaker speech stanza statement structure Studies style suggest Swift things third thought tion truth turn values whole writing York