The Science of Discourse |
From inside the book
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Page 9
... reader has realized the change which the thought and language are adapted to produce in him , then , if he should turn to make a critical estimate of the discourse he surveys it in the order of its composi- tion . In coming upon a ...
... reader has realized the change which the thought and language are adapted to produce in him , then , if he should turn to make a critical estimate of the discourse he surveys it in the order of its composi- tion . In coming upon a ...
Page 10
... reader moves inward to the point that moved the writer , and then , if he make a critical estimate of the discourse , he must move outward with the author in the process of construction . And really in the ordinary process of reading ...
... reader moves inward to the point that moved the writer , and then , if he make a critical estimate of the discourse , he must move outward with the author in the process of construction . And really in the ordinary process of reading ...
Page 13
... reader is the cause of the discourse in the mind of the writer . While skating produces pleasure , pleasure produces skating ; that is , pleasure in idea produces the skating which brings the pleasure in reality . Pleasure is both cause ...
... reader is the cause of the discourse in the mind of the writer . While skating produces pleasure , pleasure produces skating ; that is , pleasure in idea produces the skating which brings the pleasure in reality . Pleasure is both cause ...
Page 14
... reader : " And the stately ships go on To their haven under the hill ; But oh for the touch of a vanished hand , And the sound of a voice that is still ! " - The Thus a writer or a speaker idealizes an effect desired in another mind ...
... reader : " And the stately ships go on To their haven under the hill ; But oh for the touch of a vanished hand , And the sound of a voice that is still ! " - The Thus a writer or a speaker idealizes an effect desired in another mind ...
Page 15
... reader or auditor as well as to the writer or speaker . It would be as vain to read as to write without a purpose ; in either case the discourse is used for a purpose . It is possible for the reader to use a discourse for another ...
... reader or auditor as well as to the writer or speaker . It would be as vain to read as to write without a purpose ; in either case the discourse is used for a purpose . It is possible for the reader to use a discourse for another ...
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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