The Science of Discourse |
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Page vi
... become aware that all is determined from within , and not a mere matter of external legislation by some rheto- rician . Experience has proved that so much a high - school 9 ลง pupil can do , and it needs no argument to vi INTRODUCTION ,
... become aware that all is determined from within , and not a mere matter of external legislation by some rheto- rician . Experience has proved that so much a high - school 9 ลง pupil can do , and it needs no argument to vi INTRODUCTION ,
Page 47
... determined . Everything is original to the man who makes it his own , - to the one who can originate it and reproduce it . Originality in this sense conditions all effective writing . When the theme so takes possession of the writer as ...
... determined . Everything is original to the man who makes it his own , - to the one who can originate it and reproduce it . Originality in this sense conditions all effective writing . When the theme so takes possession of the writer as ...
Page 59
... determined by the kind of unity which the discourse seeks ultimately to estab- lish . The relation of the processes is not that of higher and lower , or that of simplicity and complexity , but that of the view taken of the subject ...
... determined by the kind of unity which the discourse seeks ultimately to estab- lish . The relation of the processes is not that of higher and lower , or that of simplicity and complexity , but that of the view taken of the subject ...
Page 70
... determine it from within , while relations determine it from without . Properties are of two kinds , Primary and Secondary . 1. Primary qualities are essential to the existence of the object , and are involved in every conception of it ...
... determine it from within , while relations determine it from without . Properties are of two kinds , Primary and Secondary . 1. Primary qualities are essential to the existence of the object , and are involved in every conception of it ...
Page 72
... determined from without , but are themselves the shaping and conditioning forces . These forces . reveal themselves only in reaction against a force within ourselves , and with them we begin our struggle with the outer world . These ...
... determined from without , but are themselves the shaping and conditioning forces . These forces . reveal themselves only in reaction against a force within ourselves , and with them we begin our struggle with the outer world . These ...
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Common terms and phrases
adaptation Allegory Amphibrach Anapaest apple argument Asyndeton attention attri attributes basis beauty called cause and effect clear common comparison and contrast composer conception condition connection conscious copula definite desire distinct effort Elegance elements emotions end sought energy essential euphony exposition expression fact feeling figure force given gives growing on trees guage hearer Hence idea ideal imagination impression individual induction inferred interpretation judgment language form law of unity liquid consonants literal literary logical means ment Metaphor Metonymy mind addressed move movement narration nature object oration oratory organic organic unity periodic sentence phases Pleonasm poem poetry Polysyndeton presented preter principle produced prose purpose reader reading relation requires resemblance rhetoric secured selection sense sentence Sir Launfal sound speaker style syllable syllogism Synecdoche Tautology tences theme things thought tion Trochee truth unified unit utterance vincing power whole words writer