Rhetorical Analyses of Literary WorksEdward P. J. Corbett Oxford University Press, 1969 - 272页 |
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共有 28 个结果,这是第 1-3 个
第xiii页
... writer - the appeal exerted by the confidence and admiration that the speaker or writer inspired in his audience by his display of good sense , goodwill , and moral integrity . These three modes of appeal tie in quite neatly with the ...
... writer - the appeal exerted by the confidence and admiration that the speaker or writer inspired in his audience by his display of good sense , goodwill , and moral integrity . These three modes of appeal tie in quite neatly with the ...
第58页
... writer ; and the almost inevitable stages of this development are ignorance ( or sinfulness ) ; an extremely complex period of awakening , growth , and struggle ; and final conviction , or conversion . The dramatic center of both the ...
... writer ; and the almost inevitable stages of this development are ignorance ( or sinfulness ) ; an extremely complex period of awakening , growth , and struggle ; and final conviction , or conversion . The dramatic center of both the ...
第94页
... writer who uses a particular order or by the audience that responds to it . A writer's perception of a climactic or an anti - climactic order , like a reader's , will be determined by his assumptions , and hence his expectations . A ...
... writer who uses a particular order or by the audience that responds to it . A writer's perception of a climactic or an anti - climactic order , like a reader's , will be determined by his assumptions , and hence his expectations . A ...
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常见术语和短语
Abraham Fraunce Andrew Marvell antonomasia Apologia Arbuthnot argument Aristotle audience believe Caesar carpe diem cause chapter character Christian Church classical Colin Clout Coy Mistress Deist devices diction discourse Donne Donne's dramatic Dryden effect Elder Olson elocutio Emma Emma's emotions English enthymeme epideictic Essays example figures Frank Churchill Fraunce Gibbon grammatical hate mee imagery irony James James's Jane Austen John Kenneth Burke kind Knightley Language lines literary logic lovers loving mee lyric Marvell's meaning ment metaphor mind modern modes moral Newman's novel object paragraph passage person persuasion PMLA poem poet poetic poetry Pope Pope's praise present principle proof prose Ramist readers reason Religio Laici religious Renaissance rhetorical analysis rhetorical criticism rhetorical structure rhetorician says sense sentence speaker speech Spenser stanza statement Strether's strophe style stylistic suggest Swift syntactical things thought tion traditionalist truth verse virtue vision words