Anglica, Volumer 5-61962 |
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Side 23
ON POETICAL LICENCE : LINGUISTIC AND SEMANTIC DEVIATION IN POETRY Yoshihiko Ikegami §1 . It has been an ancient dictum that the language of poetry is different from the language of ordinary life . This dictum , however , has variously ...
ON POETICAL LICENCE : LINGUISTIC AND SEMANTIC DEVIATION IN POETRY Yoshihiko Ikegami §1 . It has been an ancient dictum that the language of poetry is different from the language of ordinary life . This dictum , however , has variously ...
Side 37
... poetry poetic truth ' as against ' scientific truth ' , as some critics call it . Personification is one of these cases . Inanimate beings in the real world become animate and are expected to be accepted as such in poetry . There are a ...
... poetry poetic truth ' as against ' scientific truth ' , as some critics call it . Personification is one of these cases . Inanimate beings in the real world become animate and are expected to be accepted as such in poetry . There are a ...
Side 58
... poetry . It has often been pointed out that Macbeth is a poet . The poetic techniques employed by him at the ... poetry . But it is Macbeth who speaks the poetry . Many Shakespearean heroes and heroines speak poetry written by ...
... poetry . It has often been pointed out that Macbeth is a poet . The poetic techniques employed by him at the ... poetry . But it is Macbeth who speaks the poetry . Many Shakespearean heroes and heroines speak poetry written by ...
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The Auxiliary Do In John Drydens Plays Keitaro Irie | 1 |
The Language of The Spectator | 20 |
藤木白鳳 | 63 |
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adjectives appear authors blood Caesar called cause century character combinations comes common course death dialects Dictionary effect Elizabethan English examples expressed eyes fact fair Falstaff Fielding function give given Hamlet hand honour human instance Johnson kind King language Lear less letter lines linguistic live look Macbeth main clause marker meaning MICHIGAN mind moral nature never noun object once original Othello passage period person phrase play poetry present prose question reason reference relation relative relative clause scene seems seen sense sentence Shakespeare shows simple sometimes speak Spectator speech stand structure sub-clause thing thou thought Troilus turn University verb verse whole words writing